Professional Documents
Culture Documents
ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS
Two friends who read the book at an early stage and took extreme pains
to be helpful, and devoted much of their time to writing out or explaining
to me at length their lists of specific suggestions, are Adrian Berry of the
London Telegraph, and Michael Scott of Tangier. The latter gave
meticulous attention to details which few people would trouble to do with
another’s work.
This book would never have been written without the material concerning
the Dogon having been brought to my attention by Arthur M. Young of
Philadelphia. He has helped and encouraged my efforts to get to the
bottom of the mystery for years, and supplied me with invaluable
materials, including the typescript of an English translation of Le Renard
Pale by the anthropologists Griaule and Dieterlen, which enabled me to
bring my survey up to date.
My agent, Miss Anne McDermid, has been a model critic and adviser at all
stages. Her enthusiasm and energy are matched only by her penetrating
intuition and her skill at negotiation.
Others who have read all or part of this book and who made helpful
suggestions of some kind are Professor W. H. McCrea of the Department of
Astronomy, University of Sussex, John Moore of Robinson & Watkins,
Brendan O’Regan of the Stanford Research Institute, Edward Bakewell of
St Louis, and Anthony Michaelis of the Weizmann Institute Foundation.
I am indebted to Adrian and Marina Berry for bringing me into touch with
A. Costa, and to A. Costa for generously supplying his splendid
photographs of the Dogon, some of which appear in this book, and also for
his introduction to Mme Germaine Dieterlen. I am indebted to Mme
Dieterlen for giving her permission and the permission of the Societe des
Africainistes of Paris (of which she is Secretary-General) to publish in
English the entire article ‘Un Systeme Soudanais de Sirius’, which Mme
Dieterlen wrote in collaboration with the late Marcel Griaule.
Two early pioneers deserve especial mention: the late Sir Norman Lockyer,
who found ways to consider together the previously separate fields of
astronomy and archaeology, and the late Thomas Taylor of London, who
devoted his life to the translation and exposition of texts which have
survived the centuries of malignity, abuse, book burnings, and slaughter
which for two millennia have been the fate of those who adhered to ‘the
Great Tradition’ - nor did Taylor himself escape the consequences of his
position in pain and suffering.
Thanks are also due to the philosopher Proclus for making public certain
specific allusions to secret traditions which he might have concealed.
r. K. G. t.
Back to Contents
AUTHOR’S NOTE
Summaries follow each chapter in Part Two. The sheer amount of the
material dealt with makes it advisable for the reader to put it into a
smooth perspective by reading over these summaries which have been
prepared so that the reader may refresh his memory if he wishes. The
author can offer no apology for the complexity of the material, but he can
present these slight aids for its comprehension.
Every effort has been made to trace the ownership of all illustrative
material reproduced in this book. Should any error or omission in
acknowledgement have been made the author offers his apologies and will
make the necessary correction in future editions.
Has Earth in the past been visited by intelligent beings from the region of
the star Sirius?
When I began writing this book in earnest in 1967, the entire question was
framed in terms of an African tribe named the Dogon, who live in Mali in
the former French Sudan. The Dogon were in possession of information
concerning the system of the star Sirius which was so incredible that I felt
impelled to research the material.
The results, in 1974, seven years later, are that I have been able to show
that the information which the Dogon possess is really more than five
thousand years old and was possessed by the ancient Egyptians in the
pre-dynastic times before 3200 B.C., from which people I show that the
Dogon are partially descended culturally, and probably physically as well.
What I have done, therefore, is to push back by over five thousand years
the terms of reference of the original question, so that it now becomes
more tantalizing than ever. But now that I have done that, it becomes less
easy to answer. The Dogon preserve a tradition of what seems to have
been an extra-terrestrial contact. It is more satisfactory not to have to
presume the preposterous notion that intelligent beings from outer space
landed in Africa, imparted specific information to a West African tribe, then
returned to space and left the rest of the world alone.
It took many, many months for two or three small clues to work
themselves around in my head long enough to force me to study ancient
Egypt and a whole range of subjects which I had never previously tackled.
I doubt if, even then, I could have been persuaded to spend considerable
sums of money such as the necessary fifty pounds for the essential and
out-of-print Wallis Budge Egyptian Hieroglyphic Dictionary, which consists
of 1,356 pages and cannot even be lifted off the table by a ten-year-old
child.
But as fate would have it, I was actually given one of these huge
dictionaries, along with many other essential books on the subjects with
which I needed to become concerned. This helped overcome my natural
disinclination to erect a camp bed in some scholarly library and move in
for a couple of years. I must therefore note my debt to my dear friend the
late Miss Mary Brenda Hotham-Francklyn for giving me in the ninety-fourth
year of her life what amounted to a sizeable library of books, which were
so interesting that I found it impossible to neglect them, and the result is
now before us.
This entire matter of the Sirius mystery first came to my attention around
1965. I was working on some philosophical and scientific problems with
Arthur M. Young of Philadelphia, the inventor of the Bell helicopter and
more recently (1972) co-editor of and contributor to the book
Consciousness and Reality. Arthur single-handedly taught me more
science concurrently with my official university studies from 1961-7 than
an entire university faculty might have done.
For while I was ploughing my way through the Sanskrit language and other
onerous subjects at the official university level, I imbibed a considerable
scientific education from Arthur in company with a few friends from the
university, with whom I participated for years in a series of extremely
stimulating seminars and research projects supervised by Arthur Young
and occasionally linked to a philanthropic foundation which he had
established, entitled the Foundation for the Study of Consciousness.
Arthur Young had a particular passion for reading about mythologies from
all over the world, including those of obscure tribes. One day he showed
me a book entitled African Worlds, which contained several chapters, each
dealing with a different tribe, with its views of life and its customs and
mythology. There was a chapter about the Dogon translated into English
from the French of Marcel Griaule and Germaine Dieterlen, the eminent
anthropologists.1
‘The starting-point of creation is the star which revolves round Sirius and
is actually named the “Digitaria star”; it is regarded by the Dogon as the
smallest and heaviest of all the stars; it contains the germs of all things.
Its movement on its own axis and around Sirius upholds all creation in
space. We shall see that its orbit determines the calendar.’
We both naturally agreed that this was a most curious allusion from a
supposedly primitive tribe. How could it be explained? I had to let the
matter drop, due to other activities and concerns at that time.
The librarian went over the catalogue listings with me and I ran into a
problem: everything was in French, and I did not know French. However, I
persevered and found an article listed which included the word ‘Sirius’ in
its title. That looked promising (for nothing else did). I asked for a
photostat.
When I picked this up a week or two later (in early November 1967) I was
unable to make any sense of it, of course. So I eventually found someone
to translate it for me in return for a fee. Finally I was presented with the
material in English - and it was quite as rewarding as I could have
wished.2
For this article dealt exclusively with the most secret of all the traditions of
the Dogon which, after years of living with them, the anthropologists
Griaule and Dieterlen had managed to extract from four of their head
priests,3 after a special priestly conference among the tribe and a ‘policy
decision’ to make their secrets known to Marcel Griaule, the first outsider
in their history to inspire their confidence.
The most secret traditions of the Dogon all concern the star which the
Dogon call after the tiniest seed known to them, the botanical name for
which is Digitaria, and which is thus used in the article as the name of the
star instead of the actual Dogon name, po.
However, even in this article which deals exclusively with this subject,
Griaule and Dieterlen only mention the actual existence of a star which
really exists and does what the Dogon say Digitaria does, in a passing
footnote and in this brief remark:
‘The question has not been solved, nor even asked, of how men with no
instruments at their disposal could know the movements and certain
characteristics of stars which are scarcely visible.’
But even in saying this, the anthropologists were indicating their own lack
of astronomical expertise, for the star, Sirius B which revolves around
Sirius, is by no means ‘scarcely visible’. It is totally invisible and was only
discovered in the last century with the use of the telescope.
As Arthur Clarke put it to me in a letter of 17 July 1968, after he had
suggested he would check the facts:
‘By the way, Sirius B is about magnitude 8 - quite invisible even if Sirius A
didn’t completely obliterate it.’
Arthur C. Clarke was extremely helpful during the next few months. He
wrote from Ceylon and was fairly often in London, so he and I also
discussed at great length many of the mysterious facts from around the
world which have since been given such public prominence by the Swiss-
German author Erich von Daniken in his best-selling book Chariots of the
Gods and its sequels. At first I found myself preparing a book on all these
exciting mysteries. (No one had at that time heard of von Daniken.)
how did the Dogon know such extraordinary things and did it mean that
the Earth had been visited by extraterrestrials ?
I have therefore undertaken all the work on this subject with a certain
degree of reluctance, and if anyone pressed me during several years to
say what I was doing and they extricated from me the confession that I
was working on a book, I did not say what it was about, but merely
mumbled it was ‘about the ancient Egyptians’ or, before that stage, ‘about
the mythology of some tribe in Africa - not very interesting, really’. This
book will inevitably, I suppose, put me in that most unenviable category of
‘those people who write about little green men from outer space’.
How difficult it is to keep in mind that this was not always the case. No
wonder, then, that before such things were possible, there were secret
traditions of priests which were handed down orally for centuries in
unbroken chains and carefully guarded lest some censorship overtake
them and the message be lost. In the modern age, for the first time secret
traditions can be revealed without the danger that they will be
extinguished in the process.
Can it be that the Dogon came to realize something of this when, through
some powerful instinct and after mutual consultations among the highest
priests, they decided to take the unprecedented step of making public
their highest mysteries ? They knew they could trust the French
anthropologists, and when Marcel Griaule died in 1956, approximately a
quarter of a million tribesmen massed for his funeral in Mali, in tribute to a
man whom they revered as a great sage - equivalent to one of their own
high priests.
At the moment, we are all like fish in a bowl, with only the occasional leap
out of the water when our astronauts go aloft. The public is becoming
bored with space exploration before it has even really begun properly. We
even find that Congressmen need continual injections of ‘space rescues’
and ‘satellite gaps’ in their tired bloodstreams, like a heroin fix, in order to
stimulate them in their horrible state of lethargy to vote funds for the
space programs which so many of them consider a bore and lacking in
excitement and suspense.
And if this is really going on all over the universe, then perhaps it will not
be all that long before we find ourselves linked up with our fellows
elsewhere - creatures living beside another star out in that vast emptiness
which spawns planets, suns, and minds.
For years I have thought that those organizations which spend millions of
dollars on ‘peace’ and attempts to find out what is wrong with human
nature that it should indulge in so perverse a thing as conflict, would be
better advised to donate their entire treasuries to the space programs,
and to astronomical research. Instead of seminars for ‘peace research’ we
should build more telescopes.
The answer to the question: ‘Is mankind perverse?’ will be known when we
can compare ourselves with other intelligent species and evaluate
ourselves according to some scale other than one which we fabricate out
of the air. At the moment we are shadow-boxing, chasing phantoms. . . .
The answers lie out there somewhere with other stars and other races of
beings. We can only compound our neuroses by becoming even more
introspective and narcissistic. We must look outward. At the same time, of
course, we must look back relentlessly into our own past. To go forward
with no conception of where we have been makes no sense whatsoever.
There is also the probability that we may discover mysteries about our
own origins. For instance, one result of my research, which began
harmlessly with an African tribe, has been to demonstrate the possibility
that civilization as we know it was an importation from another star in the
first place. The linked cultures of Egypt and Sumer in the Mediterranean
area simply came out of nowhere. That is not to say that there were no
people alive before that.
At the same time the art of writing appears, monumental architecture and
the arts and crafts developed to an astonishing degree, and all the
evidence points to the existence of a well-organized and even luxurious
civilization. All this was achieved within a comparatively short period of
time, for there appears to be little or no background to these fundamental
developments in writing and architecture.
Now, whether or not one supposes that there was an invasion of advanced
people into Egypt who brought their culture with them, the fact remains
that when we get back to that period of history we are faced with so many
imponderables that we can hardly say anything for certain.
But all this gets into the speculative areas which are such treacherous
ground. It has always been my policy, as well as my temperamental
inclination, to stick to solid facts. We shall see as we proceed just how
solid the facts are, and that is a strange enough tale for the moment. As
usual, truth has proved itself stranger than fiction.
The book which now follows poses a question. It does not present, but
merely suggests, an answer. In Part One the question is posed in its
original form, and in Part Two it is rephrased. But nowhere is it answered
with any certainty. The best questions are the ones which often remain
unanswered for a long time and lead us down new avenues of thought and
experience.
Who knows where the Sirius mystery will lead us in the end? But let us
follow it for a while.
Notes
African Worlds, ed. by Daryll Forde, Oxford University Press, 1954, pp. 83-
110. I wish to point out to the reader that in the article in African Worlds,
the French word arche is mis-translated ‘arch’ and should instead be
rendered ‘ark’.
The translation was, it turned out, extremely inept. The article has been
entirely retranslated by a professional translator for inclusion in this book.
It has also been vetted by Mme Germaine Dieterlen herself, who has
kindly given permission for the publication in English of the entire article
written by herself and Marcel Griaule. It is to be found just after Chapter
One.
If you look up at the sky, the brightest star you can see is Sirius. Venus
and Jupiter are often brighter but they are not stars; they are planets
going round our own sun, which is a star itself. Now no astronomer will tell
you there is any particular reason for intelligent life to be in the area of
Sirius. The reason Sirius is so bright is that it is large and close, bigger
than the sun and bigger than the handful of other nearby stars.
But an intelligent astronomer will tell you that perhaps the stars Tau Ceti
or Epsilon Eridani, which are rather similar to our sun, have planets with
intelligent life. It would be a good guess. But among the stars most
frequently discussed as possibly harboring intelligent life, Sirius is not
included. It is not a particularly 'obvious' choice.
Project Ozma in the spring of 1960, and, in more recent years, other radio
searches for intelligent life in space, listened for meaningful signals from
the stars Tau Ceti and Epsilon Eridani. But none were detected. Not that
that proves anything but that these two nearby stars were thought by
some sensible astronomers to be possible locations of intelligent life in our
neighborhood of space.1
Project Ozma only listened to these two stars to see if any signals were
coming from them on a certain wavelength at a certain time with a lot of
energy behind them. Nothing happened. Later such attempts have more
realistically widened their scope somewhat, but the astronomers are fully
aware that they are waltzing in the dark, and their efforts really take on
the nature of a gesture which can only be described as bravado in the face
of enormous odds. They cannot be certain that they are going about the
task in the right way, but are doing what they hope is their best.
Since Project Ozma, the giant radio telescope at Arecibo in Puerto Rico,
which is the largest in the world, has listened selectively to several stars -
but not to Sirius.
It is the author's hope that the evidence presented in this book will be
sufficient to stimulate an astronomical investigation of the Sirius system
more thorough than all those to date, and build on the recent studies by
Irving Lindenblad.2
I also believe that a program should be instituted at a major radio
telescope to listen to the Sirius system for indications of any possible
intelligent signals.
Before we come to the evidence, I should say a little more about Sirius.
About the middle of the last century an astronomer was looking rather
hard at Sirius over a period of time and got annoyed because it wasn't
sitting still.4 It was wobbling. He had a difficult time figuring this out, but
he finally concluded that an extremely heavy and massive star going
around Sirius could make it wobble that way. The only trouble was that
there wasn't any large star going around Sirius! Instead there turned out
to be a tiny little thing going around it every fifty years, and so Sirius came
to be called Sirius A and the little thing became Sirius B.
Sirius B was at that time unique in the universe as far as anyone knew.
Over a hundred of these things have now been actually seen scattered
around the sky and there are many thousands more which we cannot see
even through our modern telescopes because they are so tiny and their
light so feeble. They are called white dwarfs.5
White dwarfs are strange because although they are feeble they are
strong. They do not give out much light, but they are fantastically
powerful gravitationally. On a white dwarf we would not even be a fraction
of an inch high. We would be flat, pulled in by the gravity.* You see, the
'big' star that was necessary to make Sirius A wobble turned out to be a
little thing, but it still had to be as massive and heavy as an ordinary star
of much more enormous size. It is, in short, a star so dense and closely
packed that it is not even made out of regular matter.
* A cubic foot of the matter of Sirius B would weigh 2,000 tons. A match-
box full of matter from the star would weigh a ton and a quarter. But a
match-box full taken from the star's core would weigh approximately 50
tons. The star it 65,000 times denser than water, whereas our own Sun
has a density about equal to that of water.
It is even claimed by some astronomers that the Sirius system has a Sirius
C, or a third star. Fox claimed to see it in 1920, and in 1926, 1928, and
1929 it was supposedly seen by van den Bos, Finsen, and others at the
Union Observatory. But then for several years when it should have been
seen, it was not. Zagar and Volet said it was there because there were
wobbles that pointed to it. So perhaps it's there and perhaps it isn't.6
The most recent full study of the Sirius system by an astronomer has been
carried out by Irving W. Lindenblad of the U.S. Naval Observatory in
Washington, D.C. He and I have corresponded, and he has sent me his
publications (the latest appeared in 1973) and also the photograph in
Plate 1, which was taken by him in 1970 after several years' preparation
and is the first photograph ever taken of the star Sirius B, which in the
photograph is a tiny spot of light near the main star Sirius A, which is
10,000 times brighter.
He had still had no success by early 1974 when he and I entered into
correspondence. Murdin has informed me that another astronomer, D.
Lauterborn, believes there is a third star in the Sirius system.8 Murdin
adds:
'Like Jacob's service for Rachel, the mysteries of Sirius appear to require
seven years of labour; then we hope not to have received Leah!'
But also like Jacob, the seven years may be just a prelude.
Now we see that the Sirius system is rather interesting and complicated.
Only in this century have we advanced towards knowing about degenerate
matter and understanding white dwarfs through our researches into
nuclear physics. So we would be surprised, would we not, if someone
without our modern science had known as much about the Sirius system
as we do?
The information would have filtered at the speed of light slowly through
the Galaxy, and a notation would have been made in some central
information repository, perhaps at the Galactic center. If the emergence of
intelligent life on a planet is of general scientific or other interest to the
Galactic civilizations, it is reasonable that with the emergence of
Proconsul, the rate of sampling of our planet should have increased,
perhaps to once every ten thousand years.
This is a very interesting prelude to our own story, and I believe Sagan and
Shklovskii's attitude is broadly true of the entire astronomical profession. I
have certainly never met an astronomer of today who seriously doubted
that there must be countless numbers of intelligent civilizations scattered
throughout the universe on other planets which are orbiting around other
stars.11
Any people who still believe human beings are unique as intelligent life in
the universe are seriously out of touch with reliable and informed
estimates by scientists and astronomers. An attitude which asserts that
man is the only intelligent life form in the universe is intolerably arrogant
today, though as little as twenty years ago it was probably common belief.
But anyone who holds such an opinion today is, fortunately for those who
like to see some progress in human conceptions, something of an
intellectual freak equivalent to a believer in the Flat Earth Theory. I
mention that theory because I once met a woman who appeared quite
sane and yet who was a member of a cult who believe the Earth is flat.
This was one of the more startling experiences anyone can have, and a
salutary education to me. It taught me never to underestimate the power
of the human mind to believe what it wants to believe despite any amount
of evidence.
'There are at least 100,000,000 planets in the visible universe which were,
or are, very much like the earth.... this would mean certainly that we are
not alone in the universe. Since man's existence on the earth occupies but
an instant of cosmic time, surely intelligent life has progressed far beyond
our level on some of these 100,000,000 planets.'12
'... planets are formed around the main-sequence stars of spectral types
later than F5. Thus, planets are formed just where life has the highest
chance to flourish. Based on this view we can predict that nearly all single
stars of the main sequence below F5 and perhaps above K5 have a fair
chance of supporting life on their planets. Since they compose a few per
cent of all stars, life should indeed be a common phenomenon in the
universe.'13
'But there are about 26 other single stars of smaller mass within this
distance, each of which should have a comparable probability of having a
life-supporting planet according to the present analysis'.14
This is not to imply that no life would be found outside the habitable zone.
There may very well be living things existing under most arduous physical
conditions... After elimination of frozen planets and planets sterilized by
heat, we estimate that there are about 1010 [ten thousand million] likely
planets in the galaxy [for life].
Of the 1010 likely planets, we frankly do not know how many of them
support intelligent life. Therefore, we explore all possibilities, beginning
with the possibility that intelligent life is abundant and in fact occurs on
practically every planet. In this case, the average distance from one
intelligent community to the next is 10 light-years. For comparison, the
nearest star, of any kind, is about 1 light-year away.
Ten light-years is a very large distance. A radio signal would take 10 years
to cover the distance... Consequently, communicating with someone 10
light-years away would not be like a telephone conversation ... are we sure
that we can send a radio signal as far as 10 light-years? A definite answer
can be given to this question.
Since this is established, we are faced with yet another factor: in our own
history, technological development has been rapid within a short space of
time.
When civilizations all over the universe reach 'take-off point', they have a
technological explosion. It is familiar to older members of our species
today that when they were young there were no airplanes, automobiles,
rockets, satellites, electricity, radio, or atom bombs. People were dying of
diseases which today we do not take seriously, no one with a toothache
could obtain modern dental treatment, the concept of elementary hygiene
was a novelty. I am not reciting all these wonders merely as a ritual
incantation to our new god of progress.
The point to be grasped is the sudden combustible nature of progress of
this kind. In the lifetime of a single person all this can come about.
Once intelligent societies reach take-off point, they rush so quickly upward
in technological competence that a comparison between them and non-
technological societies is almost absurd. It would be foolish for us to
suppose that any society more advanced than ours would be just a few
years ahead of us. It would more likely be just a few tens of thousands of
years ahead of us.
And the technology and nature of such a society are beyond our abilities
to imagine. The intelligent societies existing in the universe, then, are
going to be of two kinds: less advanced than ourselves, 'primitive'; and
fantastically more advanced than ourselves, 'magical'.
A further thought follows upon the above observations. Granted that there
are two forms of society in the universe aside from our own bizarre
transition stage, the 'primitive' societies are obviously only of interest to
those more advanced than themselves, for they are incapable of
communicating with anybody else. They are like we were as little as a
hundred years ago: provincial, quiet, probably quite murderous, and
smug, with the occasional visionary who is burned at the stake or crucified
causing a moral ripple.
But they cannot send or receive messages between the stars. In our
transition stage, aptly enough, we can receive such messages with
existing equipment, but could not send any unless we constructed
expensive and special means to do so. Now that means that the only
societies carrying on an interstellar dialogue of any kind are the 'magical'
societies.
These societies will be so advanced that they probably have emerging
primitives like ourselves 'taped'. They certainly have standard sets of
procedures for dealing with the likes of us, and may already have
commenced their operations with the long-range intent of bringing us into
their club. But just as no London gentlemen's club wishes to have a
savage in a g-string waving his spear and poisoned arrows about in the
members' lounge, so the interstellar club is unlikely to plug us straight into
the circuits as a fully-fledged member.
But what I am getting at is not merely to impress upon the reader that a
pecking order is likely to exist in the interstellar club of any galaxy, at
least to the extent of having restrictions on novices, but to make the point
which emerges from this. And the point is, that such highly advanced
societies have possibly developed to such a pitch of technological
expertise that interstellar travel has become possible for them, whereby
they can physically transport themselves over at least modest interstellar
distances of a few light- years to their near neighbors.
And if that is the case, then our own planet, which any half-witted
extraterrestrial astronomer in the neighborhood could assume as a likely
place for life to exist, has almost certainly been physically visited by
extraterrestrials in their travels.
This could have happened at any time in our lengthy history as a planet.
No doubt, at the very least, our distant ancestors the cave-men would
have been observed by extraterrestrial probes, who would have made a
note that something was happening on this planet slowly happening, but
nevertheless actually happening.
And as Sagan and Shklovskii said in the quotation from their book:
'It is reasonable that ... the rate of sampling of our planet should have
increased, perhaps to once every ten thousand years.... But if the interval
between sampling is only several thousand years, there is then a
possibility that contact with an extra-terrestrial civilization has occurred
within historical times.'16
If this were so, it would certainly have left some impact upon man and
been incorporated somehow into his traditions. But if several thousand
years had elapsed between that time and the present, the traces of the
impact on man's culture would have been mostly dissipated and, it would
seem, nearly impossible to elucidate. Unless some specific and
unmistakable survival were found to exist, in circumstances which would
probably be unusual, it seems that the hope of reconstructing scattered
clues and fragments of the original tradition would be futile.
That there would be something there if you could find the key seems
certain.
[An example] relevant to the topic at hand is the native account of the
first contact with the Tlingit people of the northeast coast of North
America with European civilization an expedition led by the French
navigator, La Perouse, in 1786. The Tlingit kept no written records; one
century after the contact, the verbal narrative of the encounter was
related to the American anthropologist G. T. Emmons by a principal Tlingit
chief. The story was overlaid with the mythological framework in which the
French sailing vessels were initially interpreted.
But what is very striking is that the true nature of the encounter had been
faithfully preserved. One blind old warrior had mastered his fears at the
time of the encounter, had boarded one of the French ships, and
exchanged goods with the Europeans. Despite his blindness, he reasoned
that the occupants of the vessels were men. His interpretation led to
active trade between the expedition of La Perouse and the Tlingit.
I don't know why the people of sub-Saharan Africa - with whom our initial
evidence deals - are mentioned at this point in the Sagan book, for they do
not crop up again in this chapter and it is something of a coincidence that
they are mentioned out of the blue like this.
He says they were happier if they could go back to the sea at night and
return to dry land in the daytime. All the accounts describe them as being
semi-demons, personages, or animals endowed with reason, but they are
never called gods.
It should be more widely realized that when those famous Biblical figures
Noah and Abraham 'lived' there was no such thing as a Hebrew yet in
existence. Indeed, Noah is merely a Hebrew name for a much more
ancient flood hero discussed in ancient texts which we have now
recovered from early Sumer.18 It is these Sumerians to whom Sagan has
just referred, with their legend of an amphibious creature who founded
their civilization. But all this does not concern us quite yet. I will just add
that the Jews and the Arabs are both traditionally said to be descendants
of Abraham, and Abraham was neither a Jew nor an Arab.
Now the peoples of sub-Saharan Africa are the source of our first arresting
information. The particular people are called the Dogon, and they live in
the present state of Mali. The nearest cities to them are Timbuctoo,
Bamako, and Ouagadougou in Upper Volta. Initial research by me on the
Dogon turned up an article in an anthropological journal by the French
anthropologists Marcel Griaule and Germaine Dieterlen.19
The complete article, with its footnotes and all its illustrations, and in
English, is therefore available for anyone who wishes to read it for himself.
It is thus not necessary for me to summarize its contents.
When I first read the article, which is entitled 'A Sudanese Sirius System'
(and refers to the French Sudan area, not the Republic of Sudan over a
thousand miles to the east below Egypt), I could hardly believe what I saw.
For here was an anthropological report of four tribes, the Dogon and three
related ones, who held as their most secret religious tradition a body of
knowledge concerning the system of the star Sirius, including specific
information about that star system which it should be impossible for any
primitive tribe to know.
The Dogon consider that the most important star in the sky is Sirius B,
which cannot be seen. They admit that it is invisible. How, then, do they
know it exists? Griaule and Dieterlen say:
'The problem of knowing how, with no instruments at their disposal, men
could know the movements and certain certain characteristics of virtually
invisible stars has not been settled, nor even posed.'
But even in saying this, Griaule and Dieterlen imply that Sirius B is only
'virtually invisible', whereas we know it is totally invisible except through a
powerful telescope.
Griaule and Dieterlen make clear that the large and bright star of Sirius is
not as important to the Dogon as the tiny Sirius B, which the Dogon call po
tolo (tolo meaning 'star'). Po is a cereal grain commonly called 'fonio' in
West Africa, and whose official botanical name is Digitaria exilis.
In speaking of the po star, Griaule and Dieterlen call it 'the star Digitaria',
or just simply 'Digitaria'. What is significant about the po grain is that it is
the smallest grain known to the Dogon, being extremely minute, and
unknown as food in Europe or America. To the Dogon, this tiny grain
represents the tiny star, and that is why the star is called po, after the
grain.
'Sirius, however, is not the basis of the system: it is one of the foci of the
orbit of a tiny star called Digitaria, po tolo ... which ... hogs the attention of
male initiates.'
The casual reader may not notice just how unusual it is for an African tribe
to put it quite this way. But the orbit of Digitaria, which the Dogon
elsewhere describe as egg-shaped or elliptical (see also Figures 6 and 7,
as well as the illustrations to the article), is specifically described as
having the main star Sirius as 'one of the foci of [its] orbit'.
Of course, the technical term 'focus' has here been supplied by the
anthropologists. But they were faithfully rendering the meaning of what
the Dogon said in their own language. And what the Dogon were saying,
and which they also make quite clear graphically in their drawings (see
Figures 2 and 6), is that the orbit of Sirius B around Sirius A is of a kind
which obeys one of Kepler's laws of planetary motion, extended to other
orbiting bodies.
It was Johannes Kepler (1571-1630) who first proposed that heavenly
bodies do not move in perfect circular paths.
He hit upon the brilliant insight that the planets in their motions around
the sun were moving in elliptically shaped orbits, with the sun at one of
the two foci of each ellipse. Most people I speak to have no idea that the
planets don't go in circles around the sun. Even if they were taught the
truth at school, they have long since forgotten about things like that. And
many people honestly don't know what an ellipse is unless you show them
one.
These two fragments of centre each then have the name of focus, and the
two together are 'the foci of the ellipse.' If you could get your hands on
that ellipse and push at the bulging ends, you might force it back together
again and make it a proper circle.
How did the Dogon tribe, who had no access to the theories of Kepler or
his successors, know about matters like this?
How did they even get the idea in the first place that elliptical orbits
existed, rather than circular - much less apply this idea to some invisible
star way out in space ?
And also to get it right by saying that Sirius A was at one of the foci, rather
than just somewhere in the ellipse ?
Wouldn't the natural primitive idea seem to be, even if you wanted to say
the orbit was elliptical, still to have Sirius itself at the centre ?
But no.
They knew too much to make a mistake like that. For the whole point
about Kepler's Law is that not only are the orbits ellipses, but the sun must
always be at one of the foci; otherwise nothing will work. Now, in order to
know about all this, you need not have had Kepler.
Elliptical orbits are a universal truth, as true here as they are on the other
side of the galaxy, or even in some other galaxy. Kepler merely discovered
a natural principle. He didn't invent it. So there was no need for the Dogon
to know about Kepler personally. All that is required is an explanation of
how they could have learned the universal principle from any other
source, considering that they exist on this planet, and we don't know of
anyone else on this planet, living in Africa, say, who has discovered any of
these things.
The similarity is so striking that the most untrained eye can immediately
see that the general picture is identical, in each instance. There is no need
for perfectionists to get out their slide rules or measuring tapes.
The Dogon also know the actual orbital period of this invisible star, which
is fifty years. Referring to the sacred Sigui ceremony of the tribe, Dieterlen
and Griaule tell us:
'The period of the orbit is counted double, that is, one hundred years,
because the Siguis are convened in pairs of "twins", so as to insist on the
principle of twin-ness'.
The Dogon also say that Sirius B rotates on its axis, demonstrating that
they know a star can do such a thing. In reality, all stars really do rotate
on their axes. How do the Dogon know such an extraordinary fact?
But what is really the most amazing of all the Dogon statements is this:
'The star which is considered to be the smallest thing in the sky is also the
heaviest: "Digitaria is the smallest thing there is. It is the heaviest star." It
consists of a metal called sagala which is a little brighter than iron and so
heavy "that all earthly beings combined cannot lift it". In effect the star
weighs the equivalent of.... all the seeds, or of all the iron on the earth ...'
So we see the Dogon presenting a theory of Sirius B which fits all known
scientific facts, and even some which are not known it presents as well.
They know that the star is invisible, but they know it is there nevertheless.
They know that the star's orbital period is fifty years, which it really is.
They know that Sirius A is not at the centre of its orbit, which it is not.
They know that Sirius A is at one of the foci of Sirius B's elliptical orbit,
which it is. They know that Sirius B is the smallest kind of star, which it is
(barring totally invisible collapsing neutron stars). They know that Sirius B
is composed of a special kind of material which is called sagala, from a
root meaning 'strong', and that this material does not exist on the earth.
They know that this material is heavier than all the iron on earth, etc., all
of which is perfectly true. For Sirius B is in reality made of super-dense
matter of a kind which exists nowhere on earth.
All this forms the most sacred and most secret tradition known to the
Dogon, the basis of their religion and of their lives. Connected with all this
are statements they make about the existence of a third star in the Sirius
system, which they call the emme ya star which, in comparing it to
Digitaria, they say is,
'four times as light (in weight), and travels along a greater trajectory in the
same direction and in the same time as it (fifty years). Their respective
positions are such that the angle of their radii is at right angles.'
This last star has a satellite, indicating that the Dogon appreciate that
bodies other than stars are satellites of stars.
'It is the "the sun of women" ... "a little sun" ... In fact it is accompanied by
a satellite which is called the "star of women" ... or Goatherd ... as the
guide of (emmeyd).'
But let us move beyond the Griaule and Dieterlen article 'A Sudanese
Sirius System'.
Let us now consider a later and fuller publication of book length, which is
obviously too bulky to include within this book as an appendix. I refer to
the book Le Renard Pale (The Pale Fox) published in 1965. This book, by
Griaule and Dieterlen, was produced ten years after the death of Marcel
Griaule himself.
'The excerpts concern the discovery, orbit, period and density of the
Companion of Sirius'.21
Her curiosity has obviously developed since 1950 and the publication of 'A
Sudanese Sirius System'.
But like a true professional, Mme Dieterlen merely cites the astronomical
facts in this way in a short appendix at the back of her book22 without
drawing any conclusions or even indicating the connection of this subject
with the Dogon's traditions. In fact, lest the reader assume otherwise, I
must make clear that neither Marcel Griaule nor Mme Dieterlen has at any
time (to my knowledge) made any claim of extraterrestrial contact to do
with the Dogon.
They have not even made any direct comments on the extraordinary
impossibility of the Dogon knowing all the things which they know. I could
never have made discoveries such as those of Griaule and Dieterlen and
merely said (as in the article):
'The problem of knowing how ... has not been settled, nor even posed.'
I sat down and rewrote this book in the light of Le Renard Pale (I have not
been able to discover whether this has been published in English; I read
the translation in manuscript), with its more complete information. Much
of this will be found in the context of a more advanced discussion in
Chapter Eight.
But this does not mean turning around the Earth. The Dogon specifically
say, for instance:
'Jupiter follows Venus by turning slowly around the sun.'25
The Dogon know of the existence of four other invisible heavenly bodies
Sirius B and its possible companions in the Sirius system. These other four
bodies are in our own solar system. For the Dogon know of the four major
'Galilean' moons of Jupiter.
These four moons are called 'Galilean' because Galileo discovered them
when he began to use the telescope. The other moons of Jupiter are small
and insignificant, having formerly been asteroids which were captured by
Jupiter's gravitation at some unknown time in the past. (They are thought
to have come from the asteroid belt between Mars and Jupiter which some
astronomers think once constituted a planet which exploded.)
'The mutilation (the Fox) suffered was still bloody. The blood of his
genitals fell on the ground, but Amma made it ascend to heaven as four
satellites that turn around dana tolo, Jupiter,... "The four little stars are
Jupiter wedges" ... When Jupiter is represented by a rock, it is wedged in
with four stones.'29
This figure represents the planet - the circle - surrounded by its four
satellites in the collateral directions and called dana tolo unum 'children of
dana tolo (Jupiter)'. The four satellites, associated to the four varieties of
sene (acacia), sprang from the drops of blood from the Fox's mutilated
genitals.
The sectors between the satellites represent the seasons. They turn
around Jupiter and their movements will favor the growth of the sene
leaves, for the sene moves on the ground at night like the stars in the sky;
they turn on their own axes (in a year) like the satellites.
They add in a footnote that 'the trunks of certain varieties of sene are
spiraled. A house is not built with sene wood, which would make the house
"turn". The "movements" of the sene at night are supposed to attract the
souls of the dead who "change place".' A
As for Saturn, drawn in Figure 10, the Dogon specifically describe its
famous halo, which is only visible through a telescope. According to
Griaule and Dieterlen:31
'... the Dogon affirm there is a permanent halo around the star, different
from the one sometimes seen around the moon ... the star is always
associated to the Milky Way.'
Saturn being the outermost planet which the Dogon mention, this may be
their intended meaning.
The Dogon realize that the Milky Way contains the earth:34
'... the Milky Way ... is in itself the image of the spiraling stars inside the
"world of spiraling stars" in which the Earth is found. In this "world of
stars", the axis ("Amma's fork") around which they move, links the Polar
Star ... ' and so on.
The Milky Way is described as the 'more distant stars' - that is, than the
planets.
'For the Dogon an infinite number of stars and spiraling worlds exist'.
"The fixed stars are a part of the "family of stars that doesn't turn"
(around another star) ... the planets belong to the "family of stars that
turns" (around another star) . .. the satellites are called tolo gonoze" stars
that make the circle".'36
The heavenly motions are likened to the circulation of the blood. The
planets and satellites and companions are 'circulating blood'.37
And this brings us to the extraordinary point that the Dogon do know
about the circulation of the blood in the body from their own tradition. In
our own culture, the Englishman William Harvey (1578—1657) discovered
the circulation of the blood. Strange as it may seem to us now, before his
time the notion seems not to have occurred to anyone.
John Aubrey, author of Brief Lives, knew Harvey well, and tells us:38
'I have heard him say, that after his Book of the Circulation of the Blood
came out, that ... 'it was believed by the vulgar that he was crack-
brained ...'.
However, the same theory does not seem to arouse among the Dogon
notions that their wise men are crack-brained. Here is an account of the
theory by the Dogon themselves and recorded in their own words:39
The movement of the blood in the body which circulates inside the organs
in the belly, on the one hand 'clear' blood, and on the other the oil, keeps
them both united (the words in man): that is the progress of the word. The
blood-water -or clear- goes through the heart, then the lungs, the liver and
the spleen; the oily blood goes through the pancreas, the kidneys, the
intestines and the genitals.
'... the food you eat, the beverage you drink, that Amma changes into red
blood; white blood is a bad thing'.40
They know that the blood passes into the internal organs 'starting with the
heart'.42 The Dogon even seem to understand the role of oxygen - or at
least, air - entering the bloodstream. For they equate air with 'the word'
which they say enters the bloodstream bringing 'nourishment of the
interior' by 'the impulse raised by the heart'.
The,
'integration of the "word" (air) into the body also has to do with the food
nourishing the blood. All the organs of respiration and digestion are
associated with this integration.'43
Amma is the chief god, the creator, of the universe, to the Dogon. There is
an interesting account of Amma and the creation:
And 'Spinning and dancing, Amma created all the spiraling worlds of the
stars of the universe.'46
The Dogon have no difficulty in conceiving of intelligent life all over the
universe.
They say:48
The Dogon know that the Earth turns on its own axis. When the fox walks
over the tables of divination which have been drawn in the sand,
'the planet begins to turn under the action of (the fox's) paws'.4
'When the only traces that are visible are made by the tail, the image is
likened to the movement of the Earth turning on its own axis; it is said:
"The Fox turned with his tail; the Earth turned on its own axis".'50
'So the divination table represents the Earth "which turns because of the
action of the Fox's paws" as he moves along the registers; while the
instruction table represents the space in which the Earth moves, as well as
the sun and the moon, which were placed by Amma out of his reach.'51
The instruction table here referred to has twelve registers and constitutes
a lunar calendar, with each register representing a month. It is Figure 96
in Le Renard Pale. These twelve months, then, are 'the space in which the
Earth moves' - that is, one year's orbit around the sun. And within this
orbit, the Earth's rotations on its own axis every day take place. The orbit
around the sun is 'the Earth's space'.
The Dogon know perfectly well that it is the turning of the Earth on its axis
which makes the sky seem to turn round. They speak of... the apparent
movement of the stars from east to west, as men see them'.52
The Dogon are thus free from the illusions of our European ancestors, who
thought the sky and stars wheeled round the Earth (though there was an
exception to such primitive notions in Europe which no historian of science
has ever reported, at least as far as I have been able to discover after a
great deal of searching. I have summarized this 'secret' tradition in
Appendix 1, and pointed out its connection with the Sirius mystery).
Nommo is the collective name for the great culture-hero and founder of
civilization who came from the Sirius system to set up society on the
Earth. Nommo - or, to be more precise, the Nommos - were amphibious
creatures, and are to be seen in the two tribal drawings in Figure 32 and
Figure 34 in this book. These Nommos are more or less equivalent with
the Sumerian and Babylonian tradition of Oannes.
Here is the way in which Griaule and Dieterlen record the Dogon beliefs
about the two cosmic placentas I have just mentioned:55
Two systems, that are sometimes linked together, intervene, and are at
the origin of various calendars, giving a rhythm to the life and activities of
man... . One of them, nearest to the Earth, will have the sun as an axis,
the sun is the testament to the rest of Ogo's placenta, and another,
further away, Sirius, testament to the placenta of the Nommo, monitor of
the Universe.
The movements of the bodies within these 'placentas' are likened to the
circulation of blood in the actual placenta, and the bodies in space are
likened to coagulations of blood into lumps. This principle is also applied to
larger systems: 'In the formation of the stars, we recall that the "path of
the blood" is represented by the Milky Way ...',56
'... the planets and satellites (and companions) are associated to the
circulating blood and to the "seeds" ... that with the blood.'57
The system of Sirius, which is known as 'land of the fish,58 and is the
placenta of Nommo, is specifically called the 'double placenta in the
sky',59 referring to the fact that it is a binary star system. The 'earth'
which is in the Sirius system is 'pure earth', whereas the 'earth' which is in
our solar system is 'impure earth'.60
'the day of the fish',61 and the planet he came from in the Sirius system is
known as the '(pure) earth of the day of the fish ... not (our) impure earth .
. ,'62
In our own solar system all the planets emerged from the placenta of our
sun. This is said of the planet Jupiter,63 which 'emerged from the blood
which fell on the placenta'. The planet Venus was also formed from blood
which fell on the placenta.64 (Venus 'was blood red when she was
created, her color fading progressively'.65)
Mars, too, was created from a coagulation of 'blood'.66 Our solar system
is, as we have noted, called the placenta of Ogo, the Fox, who is impure.
Our own planet Earth is, significantly,
'the place where Ogo's umbilical cord was attached to his placenta ... and
recalls his first descent'.67
In other words, the Earth is where Ogo 'plugged in', as it were, to this
system of planets. What Ogo the Fox seems to represent is man himself,
an imperfect intelligent species who 'descended' or originated on this
planet, which is the planet in our solar system to which the great umbilical
cord is attached. Ogo is ourselves, in all our cosmic impurity. It comes as a
shock to realize that we are Ogo, the imperfect, the meddler, the outcast.
But these religious elements are not the subject with which I propose to
deal. Let each reader pursue them as he sees fit, on his own initiative. I
only raise the subject that, as Ogo, we may be cosmic pariahs, because I
only hope that we must not always remain so. The Dogon seem to hold
out hope of 'redemption' just as Jesus Christ did in his great message to
the world.
Redemption can mean what you want it to mean. But perhaps it would be
more sensible to view 'sin' less as a sort of infraction of social rules and
more as a form of impurity such as Ogo represents. The perversions of
Christianity have always seemed to me to incorporate a perversion of the
notion of 'sin' and the means by which 'sin' can be exploited as a means of
temporal blackmail over other human beings. To rid ourselves of some
impurity may be closer to what is needed, and those writers who have
speculated that we suffer from a genetic fault may even be correct.
We are told that the Nommo will come again. A certain 'star' in the sky will
appear once more68 and will be the 'testament to the Nommo's
resurrection'. When the Nommo originally landed on Earth, he 'crushed the
Fox, thus marking his future domination over the Earth which the Fox had
made'.69 So perhaps man's brutish nature has already been sufficiently
subdued in our distant past.
Perhaps it was those visitors whom the Dogon call the Nommos who really
did 'crush the Fox' in us, who all but destroyed Ogo, and have given us all
the best elements of civilization which we possess. We remain as a curious
mixture of the brute and the civilized, struggling against the Ogo within
us.
The Dogon seem to have come to terms with life, amid the bewildering
multiplicity of heavenly motions in which they exist.
'... the Earth turns on its own axis ... and makes a great circle (around the
Sun) ... The moon turns Eke a conical spiral around the earth. The Sun
distributes light in space and on the earth with its rays.'70 The sun is 'the
remainder of Ogo's placenta' 71 and the centre of our system.
For some reason, which they say is the visitation to earth of the
amphibious bringers of civilization from there, the Dogon centre their life
and religion not on all this glorious panoply of solar and planetary activity
of which they know, but on the system of a nearby star and its invisible
companions.
Why ? Can it really be for the reason they say ? And if so, will the Nommo
come again ?
It is just as well that we keep our seats, for we are about to launch into the
dark waters of our planet's past, which may bring quite an alteration of
our normal conceptions of it. For beyond the fact that a culture contact
between ourselves and an alien civilization from outer space may have
taken place, of which we may find some evidence from our own ancient
cultures, we may discover that the ancient world, the further back one
goes in time, tends to develop a more and more odd flavor.
The mysteries become denser, the strangeness thicker and more viscous.
Just as in tracing the origins of sugar one goes from lighter syrup back to
the thick and pungent molasses which develops, it seems, qualities far
removed from one's expectations at the beginning, so with the past.
Its doors encrusted with almost solid cobwebs give off the stench of air
last breathed by ancestors forgotten by us all.
Notes
FOREWORD
The indigenous knowledge about the Sirius system which is set forth in
this chapter has been gathered from four Sudanese peoples:
The main investigation was carried out among the Dogon between 1946
and 1950, where the four major informants were:
Ongnonlou Dolo, between sixty and sixty-five years old, patriarch of the
village of Go, recently established by a group of Arou in the south-west of
Lower Ogol. Language: Sanga.
Yebene, fifty years old, priest of the Binou Yebene of Upper Ogol, living in
Bara (Upper Sanga). Tribe: Dyon. Language: Sanga.
Manda, forty-five years old, priest of the Binou Manda, living in Orosongo
in Wazouba. Tribe: Dyon. Language: Wazouba.
Ongnonlou is in fact patriarch of the family from which the next holder of
the title will be designated when the next holiday comes around.
It must therefore be understood, once and for all, that the system
described here represents one phase of the revelations permitted to
initiates who are top-ranking but not specifically responsible for the
calculations to do with this part of the sky.
For our part, the documents gathered together have not given rise to any
original hypothesis or research. They have been simply pieced together in
such a way that the accounts of the four principal informants are merged
into one and the same statement.
Every sixty years8 the Dogon hold a ceremony called the Sigui
(ceremony). Its purpose is the renovation of the world, and it has been
described at length by them in 1931.4 Since the beginning of this
investigation, we were faced with the question of determining the method
used to calculate the period separating two Sigui ceremonies. The
common notion, which dates back to the myth of creation, is that a fault in
the Yougo rock, situated at the centre of the village of Yougo Dogorou,8
lights up with a red glow in the year preceding the ceremony.
These bouts are held about one month before the first rains, sometimes in
May or June, in a tent or shelter pitched to the north of the village centre.7
But this rule is only theoretical: between the last Sigui, celebrated at the
beginning of the century, and 19318 there has been only one bout,
halfway through the period; but the two-yearly cowries were set down and
gathered into a pile representing the first thirty years. From 1931
onwards, the drinking bouts took place every two years. When the second
pile consisting of fifteen cowries has been collected, the second Sigui of
the twentieth century will be celebrated.9
When the seventh year comes round, a kind of trident is drawn on the
outside, as an extension to the line of dots. The same thing is done on the
left-hand side, in the order top-to-bottom. Fourteen years are counted in
this way: the seven twin years during which the world was created, and to
which a unit, symbolizing the whole, is added.11 Diagrammatically
speaking, the figure shows the god's last gesture, raising one hand and
lowering the other, thereby showing that sky and earth are made.
When it is time for the Sigui, the elders gathered in the tana tono shelter
at Yougo draw a symbol on the rock with red ochre (fig. i), which
represents a kanaga mask;13 this, in turn, represents the god Amma; a
hole is made in the ground below it symbolizing the Sigui, and thus Amma
in the egg of the world. In effect these two signs should be 'read' In the
opposite order: Amma, in the shadow of the egg (the hole) reveals himself
to men (the red design) in his creative posture (the mask depicts the god's
final gesture, showing the universe.)14
The hole is also interpreted as the hole which must be dug to put seeds in.
From this viewpoint the holes are arranged in series of three, connoting
three Siguis, placed respectively beneath the sign of three seeds, after
which they are named. Thus the Sigui at (he beginning of this century was
called emme sigi, the 'sorghum Sigui'; the next one will be called yu sigi,
the 'millet Sigui'; and the one after nu sigi, the 'haricot Sigui'.
In theory, then, it would seem possible to record the Siguis using this
simple method.
In practice, the holes become obliterated and the painting, more often
than not, is touched up instead of being reproduced and thus forming part
of a countable series. But there is another figure painted on the facade of
the sanctuaries which reveals rather more specific data; it is called sigi
lugu, 'calculation of the Sigui', and consists of a line of vertical chevrons,
the notches of which are painted alternately black, red, and white; each
colour corresponds to a seed, the first to millet, the second to the haricot
and the third to sorghum (fig. ii).
This line can be read in two ways: Either by using just one counting
system (for example the left-hand one), whereby each notch is the
equivalent of twenty years; here, the notch upon which a Sigui actually
falls is carried over to the following series: or, by taking the whole figure
and counting twenty years for each notch, regardless of its positioning
(the right column in fig. ii); here, the notch upon which a Sigui falls is
recounted.
these must have succeeded three more which had been reduced to a few
fragments and piles of dust and were still visible; as were the special
places earmarked for them at the back of the shelter, all perfectly
protected from the damp, vermin and animals. The oldest in the series of
nine, which showed a continuous progression of ageing in the course of
time,17 thus date from the beginning of the fifteenth century; and if the
three others are taken into account, the remnants of the earliest would
date back to the first half of the thirteenth century.18
It is not easy to come across material evidence dating back further than
the traces of these poles at Ibi. But there is another object, existing in a
single edition, which is fashioned during these Sigui ceremonies and which
might also, be a significant milestone in the calculation process. With the
festival in mind, each regional Hogon, as well as the supreme Hogon of
Arou, has a fermentation stand woven out of baobab fibres; this stand is
used during the preparation of the first ritual beer.
These objects are kept in the Hogon's house where they are hung from the
main l»ram, and thus form a permanent sequence. Ongnonlou saw six or
seven of them in the official residence of the Hogon of Sanga; the latter,
one of the oldest men in Dogon country, has it that his great-great-
grandfather had seen eight others which preceded the oldest in the
present series.19
Assuming a total of fourteen objects for the Sanga chieftaincy, the first -
which almost certainly does not denote the first ceremony held in this
region - would have been woven in the twelfth century, if one reckons on
the period separating two Siguis being sixty years.
The methods described above for both keeping track of the ceremonies
and for calculating the intervals between Siguis are simple and tend to be
mnemotechnic. For the initiate they simply act as understudies for other
more complex practices and knowledge to do with the Sirius system.
The Dogon names for this star - sigi tolo, star of the Sigui;21 or yasigi tolo,
star of Yasigui22 - sufficiently indicate its relation with the ceremony of
the renovation of the world which takes place every sixty years.
Sirius, however, is not the basis of the system: it is one of the foci of the
orbit of a tiny star called Digitaria, po tolo,23 or star of the Yourougou,24
yurugu tolo, which plays a crucial role, and which, unaided as it were, hogs
the attention of male initiates.
This system is so important that, unlike the systems of other parts of the
sky, it has not been assigned to any particular group. In effect the Ono
and Domino tribes govern the stars, the former including Venus rising
among its attributes, the latter Orion's belt. The sun should be assigned to
the most powerful tribe, the Arou; but so as not to be guilty of excess, the
Arou handed the sun over to the Dyon, who are less noble, and hung on to
the moon.
As far as the star Digitaria and the system to which it belongs are
concerned, these are common to all men.
The period of the orbit is counted double, that is, one hundred years,28
because the Siguis are convened in pairs of 'twins', so as to insist on the
basic principle of twin-ness.29 It is for this reason that the trajectory is
called munu, from the root monye 'to reunite', from which the word muno
is derived, which is the title given to the dignitary who has celebrated
(reunited) two Siguis.
According to Dogon mythology, before the discovery of Digitaria the
supreme chief was sacrificed at the end of the seventh year of his reign
(the seventh harvest). This was the only computation known about; the
year-unit had not then been established. The spiritual and material
principles of the victim were conveyed to Digitaria - to regenerate the
victim - whose existence was known but whose features had not been
revealed to man, because the star was invisible.
This was the rule for forty-nine years for the first seven chiefs who thus
nourished the laba ozu po ozugo po ya (the path of the mask (is) straight
(vertical) this path runs straight)
But if one takes the pun into account - familiar to the initiated - between
po:25 'straight' and po: Digitaria, the translation becomes:
the path of the mask (is the star) Digitaria the path runs (like) Digitaria.
A figure made out of millet pulp (fig. iii) in the room with the dais in the
house of the Hogon of Arou gives an idea of this trajectory, which is drawn
horizontally: the oval (lengthwise diameter about 100 cm. = 40 in.)
contains to the left a small circle, Sirius (S), above which another circle
(DP) with its centre shows Digitaria in its closest position. At the other end
of the oval a small cluster of dots (DL) represent the star when it is
farthest from Sirius.
Restored to office, he raised the level of the sky which, hitherto, had been
so close to the earth that it could be touched,31 and he completely reviled
the method of calculating time, and the method of reckoning.
Until that time the ceremonies celebrating the renovation of the world had
in fact taken place every seventh harvest;32 the Hogon made his
calculations on the basis of five day periods, a unit which established the
week as it still is today, and five harvest cycles. And as he was eighth in
line, he counted eight cycles, in other words forty years, and the number
forty became the basis for computation: the month had forty days, the
year forty weeks (of five days each).
But the Hogon lived sixty years, a number which was interpreted as the
sum of forty (basis of calculation) and twenty (the twenty fingers and toes,
symbolizing the person and thus, in the highest sense of the word, the
chief). Thus sixty became the basis for calculations33 and it was first
applied to establish the period of time separating two Siguis. Although the
orbit of Digitaria takes approximately fifty years and although it
corresponds to the first seven reigns of seven years respectively, it none
the less computes the sixty years which separate two ceremonies.34
The eighth Hogon instructed his people in the features of the star, and,
more generally, of the Sirius system.
Sirius appears red to the eye, Digitaria white. The latter lies at the origin of
things. 'God created Digitaria before any other star'.36 It is the 'egg of the
world', aduno ted, the infinitely tiny and, as it developed, it gave birth to
everything that exists, visible or invisible.36 It is made up of three of the
four basic elements: air, fire and water.
The element earth is replaced by metal.37 To start with, it was just a seed
of Digitaria exilis,38 pi, called euphemistically kize uzi, 'the little thing',39
consisting of a central nucleus which ejected ever larger seeds or shoots
in a conical spiral motion (fig. vi). The first seven seeds or shoots are
represented graphically by seven lines, increasing in length, within the sac
formed in turn by an oval symbolizing the egg of the world.
Last, a third shoot, taking the place of the first, gives it the form of an oval
which is open in its lower section, and surrounds the base of the vertical
segment. The curved form, as opposed to the straight, suggests the
transformation and progress of things. The personage thus obtained,
called the 'life of the world', is the created being, the agent, the
microcosm summarizing the universe.
In its capacity as the heavy embryo of a world issued each year, Digitaria
is represented in Wazouba either by a dot or by a sac enveloping a
concentric circle of ten dots (the eight ancestral Nommos and the initial
couple of Nommo).
four diverging lines starting from the base of a bent stem; domestic
animals;
The star is the reservoir and the source of everything: 'It is the granary for
every thing in the world.' The contents of the star-receptacle are ejected
by centrifugal force, in the form of infinitesimals comparable to the seeds
of Digitaria exilis which undergo rapid development :
''The thing which goes (which) emerges outside (the star) becomes as
star, and enabled it to renovate the world periodically. Enlarge as it every
day.51 In other words, what issues from the star increases each day by a
volume equal to itself.
Because of this role, the star which is considered to be the smallest thing
in the sky is also the heaviest:
The orbit of Digitaria is situated at the centre of the world, 'Digitaria is the
axis of the whole world,''56 and without its movement no other star could
hold its course.
But Digitaria is not Sirius's only companion: the star emme ya, Sorghum-
Female, is larger than it, four times as light (in weight), and travels along a
greater trajectory in the same direction and in the same time as it (fifty
years). Their respective positions are such that the angle of the radii is at
right angles. The positions of this star determine various rites at Yougo
Dogorou.
It is the only star which emits these beams which have the quality of solar
rays because it is the 'sun of women', nyan nay, 'a little sun', nay dagi. In
fact it is accompanied by a satellite which is called the 'star of Women',
nyan tolo, or Goatherd, enegirin (literally: goat-guide), a term which is a
pun on emme girin (literally: sorghum-guide). Nominally then it would be
more important as the guide of Sorghum-Female. Furthermore, there is
some confusion with the major star, the Goatherd, which is familiar to
everyone.
On the facade of the residence of the great Hogon of Arou and inside the
official houses assigned to the Hogons of Dyon, the course of these stars is
represented by 'the pattern of the master of the star of the Shoemaker',
dyan tolo bana tonu (fig. xi), composed of a vertical axis supporting, two-
thirds of the way up, a bulge, Sirius (S), and broken at its base to form an
elongated foot jutting to the left at right-angles, the course of the star of
the Shoemaker (C).
The lower part of the axis (SC), longer than the upper part (SD), reminds
one that the Shoemaker (C) is farther than Sirius is from the other stars,
and revolves in the opposite direction.
Thus it is that during the bado ceremony the oldest woman of the family
draws, at the entrance to the house, the 'pattern of the world of women',
nyan aduno tonu,59 or 'pattern of the top and bottom of the world', aduno
dale donule tonu (fig. xii).
It consists of an oval, the egg of the world, containing nine signs:
Da. - Digitaria. The open curve on the right indicates the acceptance of all
the substances and matter placed in it by the Creator.
Db. - Digitaria in its second position. The open oval below marks the exit of
the matter which spreads across the world; A and B also indicate the
extreme positions of Digitaria in relation to Sirius.
S. - Sirius, 'star of the Sigui' or 'star of Yasigui'. The sign, so placed that it
materializes the liaison worked by Sirius between the two stars described
above, consists of a kind of X with one right arm - the ant, key - dividing a
curved arm, the lower part of which is Yasigui; and the other part the
piece of the organ which is detached during excision. Although female, the
ant is here depicted by a straight rod, as if it were a man. This marks its
domination of Yasigui's feminity, for Yasigui is maimed.
In effect, with Digitaria as the egg of the world (see earlier) this latter was
split into two twin placentas which were to give birth respectively to a pair
of Nommo Instructors. What happened, however, was that a single male
being emerged from one of the placentas; in order to find his twin, this
being tore off a piece of this placenta, which became earth. This
intervention upset the order of creation: he was transformed into an
animal, the pale fox, yuruga,61 and communicated his own impurity to the
earth, which rendered it dry and barren.
But the remedy to this situation was the sacrifice, to the sky, of one of the
Nommo Instructors which had issued from the other placenta, and the
descent of his twin to earth with life-giving, purifying rain.'2 The destiny of
Yourougou is to pursue his twin to the end of time - the twin being his
female soul at the same time. On the mythical level, Digitaria is thus
considered to be the Yourougou held in space by Nommo, relentlessly
revolving around Sirius, or Yasigui in other words, and never capable of
reaching it.
N. - The figure of the Nommo consists of a vertical segment, Nommo in
person, upon which, and slightly below the upper edge, rests a line broken
into three unequal parts; the first is the seat of future female souls; the
second the seat of the souls of the dead; and the third the seat of living
souls.
Fa. - The star of Women, nyan tolo. An embryonic spiral calls to mind that
it is the satellite of Sorghum-Female.
Fb. - The 'sign of women', nyan tonu, consists of a diagonal line, man, cut
by a line which ends in a convex curve, woman. This shows the contact
between the sexes.63 The rod is upright with astonishment at the sight of
creation, which started with the system of women. Woman is a heavy-
bellied profile, ready to give birth.
Fc. - The sex of women is depicted by an oval which is open in the lower
part, womb-world, ready for procreation, gaping downwards to spread the
seeds.
The Bambara call Sirius 'the star of the foundation', sigi dolo, which is the
same term Used by the Dogon, and like them they call the star Digitaria
fini dolo. "The expression fa" dolo fia, 'the two stars of knowledge', is
generally attributed to it, because 'it represents in the sky the invisible
body of Faro', conceived as a pair of twins.65 This name also implies that
the star is the seat of all learning.
The Sirius system is depicted on the chequered blanket called koso wala,
'colored picture', consisting of ten sequences made up of some thirty
rectangles coloured alternately indigo and white which symbolize,
respectively, darkness and light, earth and sky, and, in Bambara
mythology, Pemba and Faro.
The system is also known to the Bozo, who call Sirius sima kayne (literally:
sitting trouser) and its satellite tono nalema (literally: eye star).
Back to Contents
Notes
We ourselves accepted this figure in 1931 and it can safely be retained for
the time being.
Ibid., pp. 167 ff., where this fault in the rock is described in detail.
The Dogon are divided into four tribes, each of which had a different role
at one time. The four are the Arou (soothsayers), the Dyon (farmers), the
Ono (merchants), and the Domino (who were confused in this respect with
the Ono).
The spot is called tana tone; cf. Griaule, op. cit, p. 171.
Or 1933.
The Dogon count a week of five days as six days, just as in French a week
of seven days is referred to as 'eight days' and a fortnight as 'fifteen days'.
For a discussion of this substitute for God the Creator cf. Griaule, Dieu
d'eau, Paris, Editions du Chene, 1948.
For a description of the mask cf. Masques Dogons, pp. 470 ff.
The largest known example is ten metres long. It was brought back by the
Dakar-Djibouti Mission and given to the Musee de l'Homme in Paris; cf. M.
Griaule, Masques Dogons, pp. 234 ff.
For another index that enables us to establish the minimum age of some
of the villages, cf. Griaule, 'Le Verger des Ogol (Soudan francais)', Journal
de la Societe des Africainistes, xvii, pp- 65-79
The Hogon of Sanga, who was enthroned in 1935, was thus the oldest man
in the area at that date (i.e. the oldest of the Dyon). If we agree that he
was born in about 1855, his great-grandfather, who, he claims, was very
old when he himself was a young goatherd, w.is probably born between
1770 and 1780.
The saying that 'if you look at Digitaria it's as if the world were spinning
(po tolo yenehe aduno gonode ginwo) was probably coined to convey this
impression.
In the system of notation based on the figure 80 this number is called '80
and 20'. The period of fifty years is very close to that of Sirius's
companion. Cf. P. Baize, 'Le Compagnon de Sirius', L'Astronomie (Sept.
1931), p. 385.
For a discussion of this principle cf. Griaule, Dieu d'eau, pp. 183 ff.
After this reform the Hogons' sacrifice was replaced by animal sacrifice.
This belief still obtains among the Dogon, and also among many other
peoples; cf. Griaule, Jeux Dogons, Travaux et Mimoires de L'Institut d'
Ethnologic de l'Universite de Paris, vol. xxxii.
The figure 60 is the old base of the system of notation still used in the
Sudan for a number of ritual calculations. In several Sudanese languages
60 is known as the 'Mande calculation', because the system is believed to
have spread from Mande. Nowadays the various districts use 80 as a base
for their calculations. Cf. G. Dieterlen, Essai sur la religion bambara (Paris:
PUF).
There is a contradiction here that has not so far been solved. On the one
hand the Dogon accept that Digitaria is in orbit for fifty years and this
figure governs the way the Sigui is calculated. On the other hand Siguis
are held at sixty-year intervals. Nevertheless, it should be noted that the
date of the last Sigui, which was celebrated at the very beginning of the
twentieth century, was allegedly brought forward. Does this indicate that
the date was regularly brought forward for each ceremony? The
uninitiated would thus be kept going with the idea that the official period
was sixty years and that, for accidental reasons, it happened to be
reduced to a half-century.
See below.
The Digitaria seed is made up of four parts, only one of which, the outer
casing, has a name, kobu. The other three are known as yolo.
For further details cf. Griaule, 'Signes graphiques des Dogons'. See also
Griaule, 'L'imagc du monde au Soudan', Journal de la Societe des
Africainistes, xix, 2, pp. 81-89.
Cf. below.
They are counted clockwise, starting from the highest figure on the right-
hand side.
It should be remembered that the Dogon, like the other black peoples, use
several different symbols or even several different sequences of images to
express a single idea or object. Conversely, a symbol often represents
several different things.
The shape of this basket is roughly the same as the outline of a mortar.
It is understood that Digitaria was the same shape as a basket, but was
not a basket.
This has the Same root as sagatara, 'strong, powerful' (native etymology).
The number 480 is the product of the base number 80 times the number
of tens in the base number 60, which was formerly in use. It is used here
to symbolize the largest number of all.
The men have two twin-souls of different sexes. Cf. Griaule, Dieu d'eau,
pp. 183 ff. The same idea is current among the Bambara, cf. Dieterlen,
Essai sur la religion Bambara, chapter 3.
Yourougou, who was born a single being, is fated to pursue the female
soul that is his ideal twin to the end of time. In particular he tried to seize
it by snatching away from his mother, the Earth, part of the placenta that
emerged after he was born, because he thought it was his twin soul.
Vulpes pallida.
Cf. Griaule and Dieterlen, *Le harpe-luth des Dogon', Journal de la Societe
des Africainistes, xx, 2.
Fini, from which fonio, a word used throughout Sudanese Africa, is derived,
is the same word as po.
The expression may possibly indicate the Sirius and Digitaria grouping, or
Digitaria and another companion. For Faro, or Fanro, the Bambara
equivalent of the Dogon Nommo, cf. Dieterlen, Essai sur la religion
Bambara, chapters 1 and 2.
Cf. ibid., chapter 1. This refers to a future world that will be heralded by
flood-waters.
The koso wata blanket, which is worn by elderly initiates at the major
Bambara institutions (dyo), belongs to a series of eight ritual blankets with
patterns and colours representing mythology, cosmology and the social
structure. They are used at night or worn as clothing, depending on the
status, duties and aims of the wearer. Apart from their economic value,
they are evidence of the wearer's knowledge. Their ritual use is plain,
particularly during marriage ceremonies. The Dogon have similar blankets.
The one known as yanunu represents a sort of very rough map of the
world showing the most important stars.
For a discussion of the way the Bambara and Dogon set great store by
weaving and the various cotton strips, cf. Dieterlen, Essai, chapter 5, and
Griaule, Dieu d'eau.
INTRODUCTION
We shall turn now to the star Sirius in history. What was its importance, if
any, in ancient religions ? Is there evidence from the ancient cultures that
the mysterious details of the Sirius system were known to others than the
Dogon tribe? And can we discover where the Dogon got their information?
I must warn the reader that Part Two is difficult, by the nature of its
subject matter. I have tried to make it readable, but beg the reader's
indulgence if have not succeeded. It is exciting material and the reader
should stick with it I am certain he will come out at the end of the tunnel
with a great deal of amazement.
For the ancient cultures are far more bizarre than the ordinary person is
generally led to expect.
A Fairytale
Once there was a beautiful bright star named Sothis, as fine as any
goddess. She had long held a dominant position in the sky and been
admired by all for her beauty. But of late she had felt unwell; indeed, it
distinctly seemed to her that she felt her life ebbing away. Night by night
she fell further from her high, proud place in the sky - closer to the skyline
and what must surely be her certain death.
Failing, failing, she clung to any companion star she could find, only to
discover that they too felt this deathly weakness, and were sinking into a
kind of sweet sleep. What was she to do ? She felt her strength going
nightly; she could hardly shine the way she wished. Once she had been as
glamorous, as scintillating a queen of the night sky as ever had been seen.
And now she felt she was as worthless as any old woman, her position at
the centre of things gone, and her beauty fading steadily. . . . Towards the
end she wept bitterly and her eyes reddened with the shame of her
coming eclipse. She was so ill, her discomfort so acute. She was almost
glad to welcome her fate, and that terrible line of earth and hills which she
had dreaded, at last devoured her brilliant presence entirely. The night
came and she was no more. Beneath the earth she rested in the balm of
death.
But because this queen of the sky had been good during her ascendancy
and had not been too haughty or vulgar, there were many admirers of her
beauty to mourn her passing. Down on the lowly earth moved less brilliant
mortals. Many nights they had stood in awe of the beautiful Sothis when
she was in her prime.
Some, indeed, had watched her birth when, red as a baby from the womb
or as the Sun when he rises daily, this bright and beautiful immortal (or so
she had seemed) had first flashed the most piercing and glittering rays of
her incomparable presence sideways across the earth seeming almost to
scorch the very ground with her flaming beauty. This first appearance had
been brief, for immediately behind her had come the all-engrossing
grandeur of the great Sun himself. Heedless of Sothis, he soon washed the
sky white with his splendor.
All the stars dissolved like tiny drops of milk, lost when their bowl is
suddenly filled to overflowing. So great was the Sun, so irresistible his
presence - he whom some compared to a great wild bull bellowing and
lording it over the heavens and the earth alike. But every night the Sun
retired to his resting place, and night by night the flaming goddess Sothis
entranced and bewitched mortal men, as she rose steadily higher and
grew to great perfection. And further and further ahead of the Sun she
rose each night.
But with her absence, how barren, how bleak, the sky now seemed. The
disappearance of this renowned beauty from the vault of the heavens
seemed such an unbearable deprivation. How the goddess was missed!
Many mortal men shed bitter tears not to see the beauty who had
infatuated them with her glancing eyes, her winsome smile, her slim waist
and delicate feet. Were they never again to see her light tread in the
celestial round dance of the stars ?
Day followed night, and the sorrow of many became soothed by time's
healing wings, which slowly fold themselves around the sufferer in
invisible layers of sleep, forgetfulness, and the new interests which life
must bring. The beautiful Sothis, though mourned, was lost only to the
sight. For all remembered her, and that image of her burned into memory
was so glorious, that to expect her actual presence came to seem almost
too much to ask of many-hued, shifting, and various Fate.
Seventy days had elapsed. Hope had long since been abandoned to
acceptance; sorrow had become numb. A shepherd had gone out before
sunrise to his lambs now fully six months old. The Sun would not long be
delayed, it was approaching the time of daybreak. The shepherd looked
towards the skyline in the east. And as he looked, he saw the horizon burn
with a refulgent fire, and the shimmering red birth of the goddess. It was
she, it must be she! No other star had that aura, such a penetrating
persona.
The shepherd stood transfixed; his eyes were seared by this fresh star,
dripping it seemed, with the waters of life, and aflame also with the fiery
resurgence of its renewed existence. As the quick Sun behind her moved
up to erase Sothis's tantalizingly brief appearance, the shepherd turned
and ran to the nearest settlement. 'Awake! Awake! The goddess has
returned! She is reborn, immortal, come back from death!' And all the
devotees assembled with excitement and renewed hope. They heard the
tale, saw for themselves the next morning, and they instituted a yearly
celebration.
This celebration exists to this day, and many are the temples, many are
the priests, who gather in the month of July throughout all our land of
Egypt to witness the much-heralded yearly rebirth of the great Sothis,
Mother Isis, bestower of concord and blessings to her people. And in honor
of her seventy days spent in the underworld, we have instituted the
seventy-day embalming and mummification rites for our own dead, as it is
pious and indeed right that we should do.
I wrote this fairytale, from the point of view of an ancient Egyptian priest,
in order to convey to the reader not only certain facts but also certain
equally important and, unfortunately, extinct emotions. For the attitudes
and feelings of ancient peoples are just as important as the dry description
of what facts they believed.
Sothis was the ancient Egyptian name for Sirius as it was spelt by the
Greeks. The Egyptians had a Sothic calendar and the first appearance of
Sirius on the eastern horizon just before the sun - after 70 days in the
Duat (Underworld) — was what is called the heliacal rising (or 'with-the-
sun' rising) of Sirius.
This event occurred once a year and gave rise to the Sothic Calendar,
whose details we need not go into.
The heliacal rising of Sirius was so important to the ancient Egyptians (as
Indeed it is to the Dogon as well1) that gigantic temples were constructed
with their main aisles oriented precisely towards the spot on the horizon
where Sirius would appear on the expected morning. The light of Sirius
would be channeled along the corridor (due to the precise orientation) to
flood the altar in the inner sanctum as if a pin-pointed spotlight had been
switched on.
This blast of light focused from a single star was possible because of the
orientation being so incredibly precise and because the temple would be
otherwise in total darkness within. In a huge, utterly dark temple, the light
of one star focused solely on the altar must have made quite an impact on
those present. In this way was the presence of the star made manifest
within its temple.
One such temple to the star Sirius was the temple of Isis at Denderah. An
ancient hieroglyphic inscription from that temple informs us:2
She shines into her temple on New Year's Day, and she mingles her light
with that of her father Ra on the horizon.
(Ra is an ancient Egyptian name for the sun.)
The heliacal rising of Sirius was also important to other ancient peoples.
Here is a dramatic description by the ancient Greek poet Aratus of Soli of
the rising of Sirius3 (often known as the Dog Star as it is in the
constellation Canis, or 'Dog'):
The tip of his [the Dog's] terrible jaw is marked by a star that keenest of
all blazes with a searing flame and him men call Sirius. When he rises with
the Sun [his heliacal rising], no longer do the trees deceive him by the
feeble freshness of their leaves. For easily with his keen glance he pierces
their ranks, and to some he gives strength but of others he blights the
bark utterly.
We see that this dramatic description of the rising of the star indicates an
event which was certainly noticed by ancient peoples. Throughout Latin
literature there are many references to 'the Dog Days' which followed the
heliacal rising of Sirius in the summer. These hot, parched days were
thought by that time to derive some of their ferocity and dryness from the
'searing' of Sirius.
Traditions arose of Sirius being 'red' because it was in fact red at its
heliacal rising, just as any other body at the horizon is red. When making
rhetorical allusion to the Dog Days, the Latins would often speak of Sirius
being red at that time, which it was.
We tend to be unaware that stars rise and set at all. This is not entirely
due to our living in cities ablaze with electric lights which reflect back at us
from our fumes, smoke, and artificial haze. When I discussed the stars
with a well-known naturalist, I was surprised to learn that even a man such
as he, who has spent his entire lifetime observing wildlife and nature, was
totally unaware of the movements of the stars.
They simply have no place in our outlook any more. We look at them, our
heads flung back in awe and wonder that they can exist in such profusion.
But that is as far as it goes, except for the poets. This is simply a 'gee
whiz' reaction. The rise in interest in astrology today does not result in
much actual star-gazing. And as for the space program's impact on our
view of the sky, many people will attentively follow the motions of a visible
satellite against a backdrop of stars whose positions are absolutely
meaningless to them.
We're off. . . and immediately we are in the frothing rapids where names
and basic guidelines must be established quickly.
The total of 365 days did not vary and as a consequence the Egyptian
year moved slowly forward in the natural year by, on the average, one day
in four years. As we shall see later . . . this was a continuously vexing
complication in keeping the star clocks adjusted.
The basis of these clocks was the risings of the stars (conventionally
referred to as 'decans') at twelve 'hour' intervals through the night and in
10-day weeks through the year.
The main star or decan was Sirius. The four decans immediately before it
in order comprise the constellation Orion. The last portion of Orion rises
above the horizon one 'hour' before Sirius. It was for this reason that Orion
took on significance in the Egyptian mythology and religion. The Egyptians
were so concerned with Sirius, the star whose rising formed the basis of
their entire calendar, that the decan immediately preceding it came to be
looked on as Sirius's 'advance man'. Sirius itself was known to the
Egyptians as Spd or Spdt (a 't' ending is feminine).
This is sometimes spelt Sept and pronounced thus. Orion was known to
the Egyptians as Ssh which is transliterated as Sah or Sah, and
pronounced thus.
Now that we have established a few names and facts, we have to consider
the next fundamental point. We must establish, on the professors' word
for it, that the star Sirius was actually identified with the famous goddess
Isis, the head of the Egyptian pantheon. This will be a major breakthrough
in our search for understanding. We must be careful not to be just saying
things without evidence.
There are some such writers who claim that mysterious hierarchies of
'initiates' exist some of them residing in secret caves deep in the centers
of mountains - and some of these 'initiates' are directly in touch with and
take their orders from 'flying saucers'!
Now on to the Egyptians: The heliacal rising of Sirius is called in Egyptian
prt Spdt.
Wallis Budge also said, after giving the following hieroglyphic forms of
Osiris:7
From the hieroglyphic texts of all periods of the dynastic history of Egypt
we learn that the god of the dead, par excellence, was the god, whom the
Egyptians called by a name which may be tentatively transcribed As-Ar, or
Us-Ar, who is commonly known to us as 'Osiris'. The oldest and simplest
form of the name is that is to say, it is written by means of two
hieroglyphics the first of which represents a 'throne' and the other an
'eye', but the exact meaning attached to the combination of the two
pictures by those who first used them to express the name of the god, and
the signification of the name in the minds of those who invented it cannot
be said.
There is a great elaboration of what As-Ar does not mean, referring to the
use of puns which particularly delighted Egyptian priests, etc. Two pages
later he winds up by saying:
'The truth of the matter seems to be that the ancient Egyptians knew just
as little about the original meaning of the name As-Ar as we do, and that
they had no better means of obtaining information about it than we have.'
The Bozo tribe in Mali, cousins to the Dogon, describe Sirius B as 'the eye
star', and here we see the Egyptians designating Osiris by an eye for
reasons which are not clear. And Osiris is the 'companion' of the star
Sirius. A coincidence? The Bozo also describe Sirius A as 'seated' - and a
seat is the sign for Isis.
A little later Budge adds:
'... in some passages (As-Ar or "Osiris") is referred to simply as "god",
without the addition of any name. No other god of the Egyptians was ever
mentioned or alluded to in this manner, and no other god at any time in
Egypt ever occupied exactly the same exalted position in their minds, or
was thought to possess his peculiar attributes.'
He adds:8
'The plaque of Hemaka proves that a centre of the Osiris cult existed at
Abydos under the 1st Dynasty, but we are not justified in assuming that
the god was first worshipped there, and ... it is difficult not to think that
even under the 1st Dynasty shrines had been built in honour of Osiris at
several places in Egypt.' *
* Emery estimates the First Dynasty as commencing around 3200 B.C.
Thus we see the immense antiquity of the recognition of Ast and Asar (Isis
and Osiris), going back well before the dynastic period in Egypt.
Wallis Budge says :9
'The symbol of Isis in the heavens was the star Sept, which was greatly
beloved because its appearance marked not only the beginning of a new
year, but also announced the advance of the Inundation of the Nile, which
betokened renewed wealth and prosperity of the country. As such Isis was
regarded as the companion of Osiris, whose soul dwelt in the star Sah, i.e.
Orion ...'
Wallis Budge also says:10
Notwithstanding the fact that As, or Ast, i.e. Isis, is one of the goddesses
most frequently mentioned in the hieroglyphic texts, nothing is known
with certainty about the attributes which were ascribed to her in the
earliest times. . . . The name Ast has, like Asar, up to the present defied all
explanation, and it is clear from the punning derivations to which the
Egyptians themselves had recourse, that they knew no more about the
meaning of her name than we do....
The symbol of the name of Isis in Egyptian is a seat, or throne, , but we
have no means of connecting it with the attributes of the goddess in such
a way as to give a rational explanation of her name, and all the derivations
hitherto proposed must be regarded as mere guesses. . . .
An examination of the texts of all periods proves that Isis always held in
the minds of the Egyptians a position which was entirely different from
that of every other goddess, and although it is certain that their views
concerning her varied from time to time, and that certain aspects or
phases of the goddess were worshipped more generally at one period than
at another, it is correct to say that from the earliest to the latest dynasties
Isis was the greatest goddess of Egypt.
Long before the copies of the Pyramid Texts which we possess* were
written the attributes of Isis were well defined, and even when the priests
of Heliopolis assigned her the position which she held in the cycle of their
gods between b.c. 4000 and b.c. 3000 the duties which she was thought
to perform in connection with the dead were clearly defined, and were
identical with those which belonged to her in the Graeco-Roman period.
* Wallis Budge believes those of the Vth and Vlth Dynasties to be copies of
earlier writings including those of the 1st Dynasty; see p. 117 of his book.
I had begun to suspect that the sister-goddess of Isis, who is called
Nephthys, represented a possible description of Sirius B, the dark
companion star that described a circle around Sirius. (For we have just
seen that Isis was identified with Sirius quite precisely by the Egyptians, a
fact which no Egyptologist would ever dream of disputing, as it is quite
undeniably established as we have seen.)
But I must confess that I was not prepared to discover this following
passage :11
On the subject of Anubis Plutarch reports (44;61) some interesting beliefs.
After referring to the view that Anubis was born of Nephthys, although Isis
was his reputed mother, he goes on to say, 'By Anubis they understand
the horizontal circle, which divides the invisible part of the world, which
they call Nephthys, from the visible, to which they give the name of Isis;
and as this circle equally touches upon the confines of both light and
darkness, it may be looked upon as common to them both - and from this
circumstance arose that resemblance, which they imagine between Anubis
and the Dog, it being observed of this animal, that he is equally watchful
as well by day as night.
This description could be taken to be one of the Sirius system. It clearly
describes Isis (whom we know to have been identified with Sirius) as 'the
confines of light' and 'the visible', and her sister Nephthys is described as
being 'the confines of darkness' and 'the invisible', and common to both is
the horizontal circle which divides them - the horizontal circle described,
perhaps, by the orbit of the dark companion about the bright star?
And here, too, is an explanation of the symbolism of the dog which has
always been associated with Sirius, which has borne throughout the ages
the name of the 'Dog Star'.
Anubis is variously represented as jackal-headed and dog-headed in
Egyptian art.
As for the singing sirens who lure sailors to the rocks, they are called in
Greek Seiren (singular), Seirenes (plural) and are first mentioned in
Homer's Odyssey. Homer knew of two sirens, but later there was a third,
and some added a fourth. (Plato decided there were eight because of that
number matching the number of musical notes in the octave.) It is
interesting that in Greek Sirius is Seirios. Liddell and Scott in their
definitive Greek lexicon give a meaning of the previous Seiren as 'a
constellation, like Seirios, Eust. 1709. 54'.
Another similar word Seistron became in Latin sistrum and Liddell and
Scott define it as 'A rattle used in the worship of Isis, . . .'
Let us now turn our attention to a remarkable book, Star Names, Their
Lore and Meaning by Richard Hinckley Allen. In this book, under a
discussion of the constellation Canis Major (The Dog), which contains
Sirius,15 on p. 130, in a description of the star of the constellation
represented by the Greek letter 8 (delta):
It is the modern Wezen, from (the Arabic) Al Wazn, Weight, "as the star
seems to rise with difficulty from the horizon," but Ideler calls this an
astonishing star-name.'
Yes, concerning what we know, it is astonishing!
Before leaving the star, it is worth noting that Allen says the Chinese knew
it is well as some stars in Argo as 'Hoo She, the Bow and Arrow', and that
the bow and arrow is a variation motif associated with the Sirius system
by the Egyptians. In Neugebauer we read :16
'The goddess Satis, who like her companion Anukis is hardly to be taken as
a separate constellation but rather as an associate of Sothis. In Dendera B,
the goddess holds a drawn bow and arrow.'
More information regarding Al Wazn, 'Weight', is found in Dr Christian
Ludwig Ideler's Untersuchungen ueber den Ursprung und die Bedeutung
der Sternnamen, Berlin, 1809, which Allen describes as,
'the main critical compendium of Information on stellar names - Arabic,
Greek, and Latin especially. It is to him that we owe the translation of the
original Arabic text of Kazwini's Inscription of the Constellations, written in
the 13th century, which forms the basis of the Sternnamen, with Ideler's
additions and annotations from classical and other sources. From this
much information in my book is derived.'
Ideler might well comment that Al Wazn is 'an astonishing star-name'. To
call a star in the same constellation as Sirius 'too heavy to rise over the
horizon with ease' looks suspiciously like an attempt to describe a 'heavy
star' such as Sirius B.
Could this reference to a 'heavy star' be a reference to Sirius B by people
who have inherited a slightly garbled version of the tradition of its being a
super-dense star invisible to the unaided eye - resulting in their seizing on
one of Sirius's apparent companions (as seen from the Earth) and giving it
a description properly applying to its actual companion?
The Arabs do not mention '480 ass loads' to describe its weight in the
quaint fashion of the Dogon, but the substance of the idea seems to be
present. It is well known that ancient Arabic astronomical lore derives from
Egypt and is found in Arabic traditions in a degenerate form. Obviously the
search must now be on for this concept of a super-heavy star in Egyptian
traditions! I had always suspected that this most secret tradition of the
Dogon reached them from Egypt, just as the lore of stars reached the
Arabs from Egypt.
And just so that we don't miss the importance of the figure fifty, we are
told there were fifty daughters of Danaus transported from Egypt on the
Argo! (Readers who wonder what other connection there may be between
the Argo of the Greeks and ancient Egypt must be patient.) Argo is
therefore totally involved in the picture, as we now see. There are many
further ramifications of this, not only of Argo, but of the number fifty.
But before moving on to what that entails, it is worth giving an illustration
of the concept of 'the rower' in the celestial barque from an ancient
Egyptian coffin text 'The Field of Paradise'.19
It is quite likely that from concepts such as these the idea of a rower and
his oar developed and became incorporated in the Argo myth and came to
be symbolic:
'. . . in the place where Re (the Sun) sails with rowing. I am the keeper of
the halyard in the boat of the god; I am the oarsman who does not weary
in the barque of Re.' (Re is another form of the more familiar Ra.)
The first person in this text refers to the deceased Pharaoh. This is one of
the examples of the common Egyptian conception that when a Pharaoh
died he became a celestial rower. It should be obvious, then, how the
concept of 'fifty rowers' by fifty positions, or oars, came to be important as
symbols. It harks back to this Egyptian motif.
Now we must turn to the Sumerian civilization (which later developed into
the Babylonian civilization). We shall be back in Egypt soon enough, with
more Argo material. But we must go east. Sumer-Akkad was roughly
contemporaneous with ancient Egypt, and the lands are known to have
been in contact.
But note the recurrence in Sumer of 'Anu' in both Anu and the Anunnaki,
and in Egypt with both Anpu (Anubis) and Anukis. In all these cases Sirius
is involved. Even the jackal or dog is common as a symbol to the 'Anu' in
both countries. There are other parallels, but we shall come to them in due
course.
In Sumerian the word an means 'heaven' and Anu is the god of heaven.
Wallis Budge says22 that the Egyptian god Nu was often identified with
Nut, which is 'heaven'.
Significantly, he expressly states:23
It is surprising therefore to find so much similarity existing between the
primeval gods of Sumer and those of Egypt, especially as the resemblance
cannot be the result of borrowing. It is out of the question to assume that
Ashur-banipal's editors borrowed the system from Egypt, or that the
literary men of the time of Seti I borrowed their ideas from the literati of
Babylonia or Assyria, and we are therefore driven to the conclusion that
both the Sumerians and the early Egyptians derived their primeval gods
from some common but exceedingly ancient source. The similarity
between the two companies of gods seems to be too close to be
accidental ... it is certain that the company of primeval gods . . . was quite
different from . . . those which formed in Babylonia and Assyria when
these countries were inhabited by Semitic populations.
I had come to all these conclusions myself before seeing this passage by
Wallis Budge.
But to return to Anu. Osiris is sometimes known as An.24
The first word could describe an orbit. Since Kepler, we have known that
our planets move in elliptical orbits rather than circular ones, and the orbit
of Sirius B is that of an ellipse. As for the next two forms anu and animan,
they seem to have meanings perilously peripheral to an account of that
level of matter (the atomic) where the nature of Sirius B is manifested.
We shall see much later in the book that other similarities exist between
certain Sanskrit terms relevant to the Sirius question and like terms in
Egypt and the Near East. But we shall leave those philological matters
until later, when they will be shown to have considerable importance.
Back to Anubis.
Wallis Budge says of him:28
'His worship is very ancient, and there is no doubt that even in the earliest
times his cult was general in Egypt; it is probable that it is older than that
of Osiris.'
Also he points out here, as elsewhere, that the face of the deceased
human becomes identified with Anubis, and it is just the head of Anubis
which is symbolically represented by the jackal or dog. I have already
pointed out that he is described as the circle or orbit separating the dark
Nephthys from the light Isis or Sirius. In other words, I take Anubis to
represent the orbit of Sirius B around Sirius A.
The Apis bull is the animal into which the dead Osiris was sewn and
transported, according to a late legend which is widely known. But more
basically, the 'Apis Bull' (the deity known under the Ptolemies us Serapis)
is Asar-Hapi. It is Osiris himself! In The Gods of the Egyptians, we read
'Apis is called "the life of Osiris, the lord of heaven" ' and 'Apis was, in fact,
believed to be animated by the soul of Osiris, and to be Osiris
incarnate'.28
We read later:29
'Others again are of the opinion that by Anubis is meant Time, and that his
denomination of Kuon [the Greek word for 'dog'] does not so much allude
to any likeness which he has to the dog, though this be the general
rendering of the word, as to that other significance of the term taken from
breeding; because Time begets all things out of itself, bearing them within
itself, as it were in a womb. But this is one of those secret doctrines which
are more fully made known to those who are initiated into the worship of
Anubis.'
Exactly. A secret doctrine! What one would give for a fuller account!
This is the trouble with most of our sources; they give away little except
by inference. Secret doctrines are not scribbled down too frequently and
left for posterity. The most secret doctrine of the Dogon was only revealed
with great reluctance after many, many years, and following upon a
conference by the Initiates. The Egyptians were no fools, and we can
hardly expect them to have left papyri or texts specifically revealing in so
many words what they were not supposed to reveal. We can only try to
piece together clues. But we will see our clues eventually turn into a
veritable avalanche.
The last passage from Wallis Budge was a quotation by him from
Plutarch's 'Isis and Osiris'. Many Egyptologists have remarked on the irony
that we have nowhere in Egyptian sources a full, coherent account of Isis
and Osiris not even in all the sources put together! And we are forced to
rely on Plutarch, who did preserve a long account which he wrote in his
native Greek. Plutarch in thought to have been a priest himself, and was
certainly a Delphic initiate.
He had a talent for befriending priests and priestesses. One of his best
friends was the priestess Clea of the oracle at Delphi. His treatise 'Isis and
Osiris' is dedicated to Clea and addressed to her.
This sort of thing was standard practice — as with the study of Egyptian
religion and astronomy undertaken centuries earlier by the Greek scholar
Eudoxus (colleague of Plato and Aristotle), who was given a letter of
introduction to the last of the native Pharaohs, Nectanebo, by the Spartan
general Agesilaus, and who in turn sent him off to associate with his
priests. The fact that Plutarch's treatise is addressed to Clea may indicate
a debt to her for its preparation as well as common religious enthusiasms.
So, no doubt Plutarch did with the Egyptian priests what Griaule and
Dieterlen did with the Dogon - drew some secret traditions out of them. It
is thus not surprising that Plutarch's essay is more respected by
Egyptologists than by classicists.
Plutarch says:
'Some are of the opinion that Anubis is Cronos.'30
Chronos, of course, was the Greek 'time the devourer', spelt with an h.
Cronos in Latin is Saturn. There is a considerable debate among scholars
whether Cronos (Saturn), the former chief god prior to Zeus (Jupiter), has
any definite relation to the word chronos spelt with the h and sometimes
used as a proper name for Time.
From this latter word we derive chronology, chronicle, etc. The Sumerian
god Anu is quite similar to the Greek Cronos because both Cronos and Anu
were 'old' gods who were displaced by younger blood - by Zeus and Enlil
respectively. Thus another possible link between Anu and Anubis, if one be
willing to grant that Cronos and Chronos are not entirely separate words
and concepts in ancient pre-classical Greece.
Wallis Budge continues with reference to Plutarch:
Referring to Osiris as the 'common Reason which pervades both the
superior and inferior regions of the universe', he [Plutarch] says that it is,
moreover, called 'Anubis, and sometimes likewise Hermanubis (i.e. Heru-
em-Anpu); the first of these names expressing the relation it has to the
superior, as the latter, to the inferior world. And for this reason it is, they
sacrifice to him two Cocks, the one white, as a proper emblem of the
purity and brightness of things above, the other of a saffron color,
expressive of that mixture and variety which is to found on those lower
regions.'
Here is what I take to be a possible reference to the white Sirius A and the
'darker' Sirius B. But also, the 'lower regions' are the horizons, where white
heavenly bodies at their 'births' and 'deaths' become saffron-colored.
There is a clearer translation by Babbitt in the precise description of
Anubis as 'the combined relation of the things'31 rather than as 'the
common Reason which pervades' the light world and the dark world.
A circular orbit is just that - 'a combined relation' between the star
revolving and the star revolved around. In order to make this more firmly
established less as fancy than as fact, I shall cite Plutarch's words from his
next paragraph (Babbitt's translation):
'Moreover, they (the Egyptians) record that in the so-called books of
Hermes (the Trismegistic literature?) it is written in regard to the sacred
names that they call the power which is assigned to direct the revolution
of the Sun Horus . . .'
This is important because we see here that they specifically call the orbit
of the sun by a god's name. If they can call the revolution of the sun by a
god's name, they can call the revolution of Sirius B (assuming they really
knew about it) by a god's name. We are dealing with a precedent.
The original epic is lost, but there is no reason to doubt that this
miraculous feature went back to it, and, if so, was at least as old as the
Odyssey in which the Argo and its story are mentioned.'
Parke then emphasizes most strongly that it is the timber itself that acts
as guide. It is self-sufficient and not merely an oracular medium.
Thus we see that the Argo had a unique capacity for 'self impelled motion'
which was built into it by Athena (whom Plutarch identifies with Isis).88
Now is a suitable stage to return to the Sumerians, as in their culture we
shall find many significant references to 'fifty heroes', 'fifty great gods',
etc. But first we shall leave the fifty Argonauts and their magical ship to
turn our attention to what appears to be a rather precise Egyptian
description of the Sirius system preserved in an unusual source.
The source is G. R. S. Mead (who was a friend of the poet Yeats and is
mentioned by his nickname 'Old Crore' in Ezra Pound's Cantos), whose
three volume Thrice Greatest Hermes36 contains a translation of, with
extensive prolegomena and notes to, the obscure and generally ignored
ancient 'Trismegistic literature' of the Hermetic tradition. These writings
are largely scorned by classical scholars who consider them Neoplatonic
forgeries.
Of course, ever since the wild Neoplatonic boom in the Italian Renaissance
period when Marsilio Ficino translated and thereby preserved for posterity
(one must grant the Medicis the credit for finding and purchasing the
manuscripts!) such Neoplatonists as Iamblichus, as well as these
Trismegistic writings, the Neoplatonists have been in the doghouse. The
Loeb Classical Library still has not published all of Plotinus even now.
But most readers will not be familiar either with the term 'trismegistic' or
with the Neoplatonists. So I had better explain. The Neoplatonists are
Greek philosophers who lived long enough after Plato to have lost the
name of Platonists as far as modern scholars are concerned (though they
were intellectual disciples of Plato and considered themselves Platonists).
Modern scholars have added the prefix 'Neo-' to 'Platonist' for their own
convenience, in order to distinguish them from their earlier predecessors,
those Platonists who lived within 150 years of Plato himself. The Platonic
Academy existed for over nine centuries at Athens. In actuality, scholars
talk about 'Middle Platonists', 'Syrian Platonists', 'Christian Platonists',
'Alexandrian Platonists', and so on. I suggest the reader look at my
Appendix I, which will tell him a lot about the Neoplatonists and their
connection with the Sirius mystery, and which deals primarily with Proclus.
G. R. S. Mead, at the beginning of his work Thrice Greatest Hermes,
explains fully what 'the Trismegistic Literature' is. He calls it 'Trismegistic'
instead of by its earlier designation 'Hermetic' (from the name of the
Greek god Hermes) in order to distinguish it from other less interesting
writings such as the Egyptian Hermes prayers and also the 'Hermetic
Alchemical Literature'.
The writings contain some 'mystical' elements and certainly some sublime
elements. Old Cosimo de Medici was told by Ficino that he could translate
for him either the Hermetic Literature or the dialogues of Plato, but not
both at once.
This does not fit well with the hard rationalism of an age still bound by the
(albeit decaying) fetters of nineteenth-century scientific deterministic
prejudice. The sublime irony is, of course, that proven and authentic
Egyptian texts are obviously mystical, but that is considered all right.
However, as long as there is a belief that the Trismegistic literature is
Neoplatonic it will be despised because it is mystical.
The Trismegistic literature may be Neoplatonic. But that does not make
what it has to say about Egyptian religion any less valid per se than the
'Isis and Osiris' by the Greek Plutarch, who was only slightly earlier in time
than the Neoplatonist Greeks. It is time for scholars to pay some attention
to this sadly neglected material. Much of the Trismegistic literature
probably goes back to genuine sources or compilations such as Manetho's
lost Sothis.
But in order to recognize this one must know about the extraordinary
Imhotep, a brilliant genius, philosopher, doctor, and Prime Minister (to use
our terms) during the Third Dynasty in Egypt circa 2600 B.C. under King
Zoser, whose tomb and temple he constructed and designed himself. (This
is the famous step-pyramid at Sakkara, the first pyramid ever built and the
world's earliest stone building according to some.)
Imhotep was over the centuries gradually transformed into a god and 'a
son of Ptah'. One reason why the process of his deification may have been
retarded for some thousands of years is that writings by him survived,
rather like the survival of the Gathas by Zarathustra (Zoroaster), making it
impossible to claim that a man who left writings could in fact have been a
god. Just like Mohammed and Zoroaster, Imhotep remained a sort of
'prophet' through his surviving writings.
For the significant passage, now, here is the entire paragraph:
'To him (Hermes) succeeded Tat, who was at once his son and heir unto
these knowledges [this almost certainly implies a priesthood]; and not
long afterwards Asclepius-Imuth, according to the will of Ptah who is
Hephaestus, and all the rest who were to make enquiry of the faithful
certitude of heavenly contemplation, as Foreknowledge (or Providence)
willed, Foreknowledge queen of all.'
Now this is a really striking passage. We have the mysterious 'Hermes'
succeeded by an Egyptian priesthood of Thoth. Then 'not long afterwards'
we have someone called Asclepius-Imuth 'according to the will of Ptah'.
This is I mhotep! Ptah, known to the Greeks as Hephaestus, was
considered the father of Imhotep in late Egyptian times. In fact, it is
interesting that this text avoids the late form 'son of Ptah' to describe
Imhotep.
Imhotep was known to the Greeks and provided the basis for their god
Asclepius (the Greek god of medicine, corresponding to Imhotep's late
form as Egyptian god of medicine). Imhotep is also spelled Imouthes,
Imothes, Imutep, etc. Hence the form in this treatise 'Asclepius-Imuth'.
There is absolutely no question that Imhotep is being referred to here. And
in the light of that, certain other statements in this passage become quite
interesting.
It has already been mentioned that in a treatise like 'The Virgin of the
World', where gods' names are thrown round like birdseed, the authors
were exceedingly restrained to have avoided labeling Asclepius-Imhotep
as 'a son of Ptah-Hephaestus'. This may, indeed, point to a genuine early
source from the time before that when the Egyptians ceased to regard
Imhotep as a mortal.
Hurry says:38
For many years Egyptologists have been puzzled to explain why Imhotep,
who lived in the days of King Zoser, ca. 2900 B.C., was not ranked among
the full gods of Egypt until the Persian period, dating from 525 b.c. The
apotheosis of a man, however distinguished, so many centuries after his
lift on earth seems mysterious.
But perhaps the most interesting thing about the possible forthcoming
discovery of Imhotep's tomb is that it will almost certainly be full of books.
Would a man like Imhotep be buried without them ?
Bearing these books in mind (and I am sure they are there waiting
underground like a time bomb for us), it is interesting to read this passage
in 'The Virgin of the World' following shortly upon that previously quoted:
The sacred symbols of the cosmic elements were hid away hard by the
secrets of Osiris. Hermes, ere he returned to Heaven, invoked a spell on
them, and spake these words: . . . 'O holy books, who have been made by
my immortal hands, by incorruption's magic spells ... (at this point there is
a lacuna as the text is hopeless) . . . free from decay throughout eternity
remain and incorrupt from time! Become unseeable, unfindable, for every
one whose foot shall tread the plains of this land, until old Heaven doth
bring forth meet instruments for you, whom the Creator shall call souls.'
Thus spake he; and, laying spells on them by means of his own works, he
shut them safe away in their own zones. And long enough the time has
been since they were hid away.
In the treatise the highest objective of ignorant men searching for the
truth is described as:
'(Men) will seek out . . . the inner nature of the holy spaces which no foot
may tread, and will chase after them into the height, desiring to observe
the nature of the motion of the Heaven.
'These are as yet moderate things. For nothing more remains than Earth's
remotest realms; nay, in their daring they will track out Night, the farthest
Night of all.'
We 'will chase out into the height' of space to 'observe the nature of the
motions of the Heavens', says this old (indeterminately old) treatise.
How correct it was. We have now landed on the moon, which is 'chasing
out into the height' with a vengeance. And we are indeed 'observing the
nature of the notion of the Heavens'.
And the treatise is also right in saying that 'these are yet moderate
things'.
For, as everyone knows, the people in the space program feel as if they
have only just begun. Man will only pause properly again when he has
made the entire solar system his familiar and his own. Then we shall be
faced with the limitations of our solar system and the barrier that
separates it from the stars. What then ? Yes, what we have done to date
certainly deserves the description of 'yet moderate things'. Vasco da
Gama may have congratulated himself on his brilliant navigational
accomplishments, but as we can clearly see in his case, a beginning is
only a beginning. It is 'yet moderate things'.
According to the treatise, after these moderate things we shall 'in our
daring' even learn the greatest secret ... we shall discover 'Night'. And the
meaning of the 'Dark Rite' will become clear.
And as this rite and this mystery concern Isis and the star Sirius and by
the context of this prophecy clearly concerns the heavens,
Can we be accused of sensationalism in making the suggestion that
nothing would shake up the human race more than having the discovery
of intelligent life elsewhere in the universe proven for the first time ?
And what if the dark companion of Sirius really does hold the answer to
this mystery?
What if the nearest centre of civilization really is based at the Sirius
system and keeps a watchful eye on us from time to time ?
What if this is proven by our detecting on our radio telescopes actual
traces of local radio communications echoing down those nine light years
of space in the vast spreading ripple of disintegrating signals that any
culture remotely near to us in development would be bound to dribble
forth into the surrounding universe ?
What if this happens?
It will be like the sky falling in, won't it?
SUMMARY
Sirius was the most important star in the sky to the ancient Egyptians. The
ancient Egyptian calendar was based on the rising of Sirius. It is
established for certain that Sirius was sometimes identified by the ancient
Egyptians with their chief goddess Isis.
The companion of Isis was Osiris, the chief Egyptian god. The 'companion'
of the constellation of the Great Dog (which includes Sirius) was the
constellation of Orion. Since Isis is equated with Sirius, the companion of
Isis must be equated, equally, with the companion of Sirius. Osiris is thus
equated on occasion with the constellation Orion.
We know that the 'companion of Sirius' is in reality Sirius B. It is
conceivable that Osiris-as-Orion, 'the companion of Sirius', is a stand-in for
the invisible true companion Sirius B.
'The oldest and simplest form of the name' of Osiris, we are told, is a
hieroglyph of a throne and an eye. The 'eye' aspect of Osiris is thus
fundamental. The Bozo tribe of Mali, related to the Dogon, call Sirius B 'the
eye star'. Since Osiris is represented by an eye and is sometimes
considered 'the companion of Sirius', this is equivalent to saying that
Osiris is 'the eye star', provided only that one grants the premises that the
existence of Sirius B really was known to the ancient Egyptians and that
'the companion of Sirius' therefore could ultimately refer to it.
The meanings of the Egyptian hieroglyphs and names for Isis and Osiris
were unknown to the earliest dynastic Egyptians themselves, and the
names and signs appear to have a pre-dynastic origin - which means
around or before 3200 B.C., in other words 5,000 years ago at least. There
has been no living traditional explanation for the meanings of the names
and signs for Isis and Osiris since at least 2800 b.c. at the very latest.
'The Dog Star' is a common designation of Sirius throughout known
history. The ancient god Anubis was a 'dog god', that is, he had a man's
body and a dog's head.
In discussing Egyptian beliefs, Plutarch says that Anubis was really the son
of Nephthys, sister to Isis, although he was said to be the son of Isis.
Nephthys was 'invisible', his was 'visible'. (In other words, the visible
mother was the stand-in for the invisible mother, who was the true
mother, for the simple reason that the invisible mother could not be
perceived.)
Plutarch said that Anubis was a,
'horizontal circle, which divides the invisible part... which they call
Nephthys, from the visible, to which they give the name Isis; and as this
circle equally touches upon the confines of both light and darkness, it may
be looked upon as common to them both.'
This is as clear an ancient description as one could expect of a circular
orbit (called 'Anubis') of a dark and invisible star (called 'Nephthys')
around its 'sister', a light and visible star (called 'Isis') - and we know Isis
to have been equated with Sirius.
What is missing here are the following specific points which must be at
this stage still our assumptions:
(a) The circle is actually an orbit
(b) The divine characters are actually stars, specifically in this context
Actually, Anubis and Osiris were sometimes identified with one another.
Osiris, the companion of Isis who is sometimes 'the companion of Sirius' is
also sometimes identified with the orbit of the companion of Sirius, and
this is reasonable and to be expected.
Isis-as-Sirius was customarily portrayed by the ancient Egyptians in their
paintings as traveling with two companions in the same celestial boat. And
as we know, Sirius does, according to some astronomers, have two
companions, Sirius B and Sirius G.
To the Arabs, a companion-star to Sirius (in the same constellation of the
Great Dog) was named 'Weight' and was supposed to be extremely heavy
- almost too heavy to rise over the horizon. 'Ideler calls this an astonishing
star-name' we are told, not surprisingly.
The true companion-star of Sirius, Sirius B, is made of super-dense matter
which is heavier than any normal matter in the universe and the weight of
this tiny star is the same as that of a gigantic normal star.
The Dogon also, as we know, say that Sirius B is 'heavy' and they speak of
its 'weight'.
The Arabs also applied the name 'Weight' to the star Canopus in the
constellation Argo. The Argo was a ship in mythology which carried
Danaos and his fifty daughters to Rhodes. The Argo had fifty oarsmen
under Jason, called Argonauts. There were fifty oars to the Argo, each with
its oarsman-Argonaut. The divine oarsman was an ancient Mediterranean
motif with sacred meanings.
The orbit of Sirius B around Sirius A takes fifty years, which may be related
to the use of the number fifty to describe aspects of the Argo.
There are many divine names and other points in common between
ancient Egypt and ancient Sumer (Babylonia). The Sumerians seem to
have called Egypt by the name of 'Magan' and to have been in contact
with it.
The chief god of Sumer, named Anu, was pictured as a jackal, which is a
variation of the dog motif and was used also in Egypt for Anubis, the dog
and the jackal apparently being interchangeable as symbols. The Egyptian
form of the name Anubis is 'Anpu' and and is similar to the Sumerian 'Anu',
and both are jackal-gods.
The famous Egyptologist Wallis Budge was convinced that Sumer and
Egypt both derived their own cultures from a common source which was
'exceedingly ancient'.
Anu is also called An (a variation) by the Sumerians. In Egypt Osiris is
called An also.
Remembering that Plutarch said that Anubis (Anpu in Egyptian) was a
circle, it is interesting to note that in Sanskrit the word Anda means
'ellipse'. This may be a coincidence.
Wallis Budge says that Anubis represents time. The combined meanings of
'time' and 'circle' for Anubis hint strongly at 'circular motion'.
The worship of Anubis was a secret mystery religion restricted to initiates
(and we thus do not know its content). Plutarch, who writes of Anubis, was
an initiate of several mystery religions, and there is reason to believe his
information was from well-informed sources. (Plutarch himself was a Greek
living under the Roman Empire.) A variant translation of Plutarch's
description of Anubis is that Anubis was 'a combined relation' between Isis
and Nephthys. This has overtones which help in thinking of 'the circle' as
an orbit - a 'combined relation' between the star orbiting and the star
orbited.
The Egyptians used the name Horus to describe 'the power which is
assigned to direct the revolution of the sun ' according to Plutarch. Thus
the Egyptians conceived of and named such specific dynamics - an
essential point.
Plutarch says Anubis guarded like a dog and attended on Isis. This fact,
plus Anubis being 'time', and 'a circle' suggests even more an orbital
concept - the ideal form of attendance of the prowling guard dog.
Aristotle's friend Eudoxus (who visited Egypt) said that the Egyptians had
a tradition that Zeus (chief god of the Greeks whose name is used by
Eudoxus to refer to his Egyptian equivalent, which leaves us wondering
which Egyptian god is meant - presumably Osiris) could not walk because
'his legs were grown together'. This sounds like an amphibious creature
with a tail for swimming instead of legs for walking. It is like the
semidivine creature Oannes, reputed to have brought civilization to the
Sumerians, who was amphibious, had a tail instead of legs, and retired to
the sea at night.
Plutarch relates Isis to the Greek goddess Athena (daughter of Zeus) and
says of them they were both described as 'coming from themselves', and
as 'self-impelled motion'. Athena supervised the Argo and placed in its
prow the guiding oak timber from Dodona (which is where the Greek ark
landed, with the Greek version of the Biblical Noah, Deukalion, and his
wife Pyrrha). The Argo thus obtained a distinctive 'self-impelled motion'
from Athena, whom Plutarch specifically relates to Isis in this capacity.
The earliest versions of the Argo epic which were written before the time
of Homer are unfortunately lost. The surviving version of the epic is good
reading but relatively recent (third century B.C.)
The Sumerians had 'fifty heroes', 'fifty great gods', etc., just as the later
Greeks with their Argo had 'fifty heroes' and the Argo carried 'fifty
daughters of Danaos.'
An Egyptian papyrus says the companion of Isis is 'Lord in the perfect
black'. This sounds like the invisible Sirius B. Isis's companion Osiris 'is a
dark god'.
The Trismegistic treatise 'The Virgin of the World' from Egypt refers to 'the
Black Rite', connected with the 'black' Osiris, as the highest degree of
secret initiation possible in the ancient Egyptian religion - it is the ultimate
secret of the mysteries of Isis.
This treatise says Hermes came to earth to teach men civilization and
then again 'mounted to the stars', going back to his home and leaving
behind the mystery religion of Egypt with its celestial secrets which were
some day to be decoded.
There is evidence that 'the Black Rite' did deal with astronomical matters.
Hence the Black Rite concerned astronomical matters, the black Osiris,
and Isis. The evidence mounts that it may thus have concerned the
existence of Sirius B.
A prophecy in the treatise 'The Virgin of the World' maintains that only
when men concern themselves with the heavenly bodies and 'chase after
them into the height' can men hope to understand the subject-matter of
the Black Rite. The understanding of astronomy of today's space age now
qualifies us to comprehend the true subject of the Black Rite, if that
subject is what we suspect it may be.
Much material about the Sumerians and Babylonians has only been
circulated since the late 1950s and during the 1960s, and our knowledge
of pulsars is even more recent than that. It is doubtful that this book could
have been written much earlier than the present. The author began work
in earnest in 1967 and finished the book in 1974.
Even so, he feels the lack of much needed information: sites remain
unexcavated, texts untranslated from various ancient languages,
astronomical investigations are perpetually incomplete. The author has
also found it difficult to master material from so many different fields and
wishes he were much better qualified.
The Sirius question could not realistically have been posed much earlier,
and future discoveries in many fields will be essential to its full
consideration.
It is also concerned with the mysterious thing called 'Night' Who weaves
her web with rapid light though it be less than Sun's'. It is made plain that
'Night' is not the night sky because it moves in the Heaven along with 'the
other mysteries in turn that move in Heaven, with ordered motions and
with periods of times, with certain hidden influences bestowing order on
the things below and co-increasing them'.
We must scrutinize the description of what is labeled 'Night' in this
treatise. This description makes it perfectly clear that 'Night' is not 'night',
but a code word. For it is said to have 'light though it be less than Sun's'.
The dark companion of Sirius is a star and has light, though less than the
sun. Also 'Night' said 'to weave her web with rapid light' which specifically
describes the object as being in motion.
Since Sirius B orbits Sirius A in fifty years, it moves more rapidly even than
three of our sun's planets in our own solar system - Pluto, Neptune, and
Uranus. Of these three, Uranus is the most rapid, and its orbit about the
sun takes eighty-four years. So here is a star orbiting more rapidly than a
planet! That may indeed be said to constitute 'weaving a web with rapid
light'!
Now to turn to the Sumerian culture, or, more properly, the Sumero-
Ukadian culture. It was roughly contemporaneous with ancient Egypt and I
had already suspected its basic religious concepts to be so similar to those
of Egypt that I imagined them to have a common origin. Then I discovered
that Wallis Budge thought the same thing from his point of view as a
distinguished Egyptologist.
But to the Sumerians this land, which lay in a direction seemingly other
than that of Egypt, had immense importance. consequently, it has tended
to monopolize the attention of modern scholars investigating Sumerian
geographical references. Kramer thinks that the land Magan' was probably
Egypt and that Sargon even sent his armies there.
The basic Egyptian astronomy and the basic Sumero-Akkadian astronomy
(this assumes a continuity of some sort, as there is no overtly
astronomical treatise from the early period of Sumer) are identical. For the
multitude of variations at a less basic level, one may consult Professor
Otto Neugebauer's the Exact Sciences in Antiquity. But Neugebauer's
interests lie with late material, as he admits, and he does less than justice
to the earlier material, skimming over it quickly and making little of some
things which are important.
Here is an example of his attitude expressed in his own words near the
beginning of Chapter V:
'Our description of Babylonian astronomy will be rather incomplete. The
historical development will be given in bare outline. As in the case of
Egypt, a detailed discussion of the few preserved early texts would require
not only too much room but would also unduly exaggerate their historical
importance. For the late period, however, the opposite situation prevails.'
Well, at least Professor Neugebauer is honest about his preferences.
Having nodded in the direction of an authority who has voluntarily
abdicated, we proceed. For our evidence we turn to E. A. Speiser's
translation1 of the Akkadian creation epic know as the Enuma elish from
the first two words of the text which mean 'When on high . . . '
The text specifically states that there are twelve months consisting of
three periods each (unless one strains the point enormously and maintains
on no grounds whatsoever that these three periods are unequal, they
must be of ten days each - hence 'ten-day weeks' as in Egypt), and that a
constellation or 'zone' of the sky applies to each of these 'weeks'.
Since three times twelve equals thirty-six, we have thirty-six decans, each
of which is 'designated' by a constellation. And also as in Egypt, each
decan is an 'astral likeness' of a great god. It is surprising that no scholar
has seen that this passage in the Enuma elish describes the Egyptian star-
clock system down to the last detail.
No doubt also the five 'epagomenal' days left over in order to fill out this
resulting 360-day year to a 365-day year are referred to in the line: 'After
defining the days of the year of (heavenly) figures,' which is again
identical with the Egyptian tradition where the five left-over days are each
assigned to five different gods or heavenly figures and thus defined. In
Egypt these five left-over days are called 'the days upon the year'. These
five days are also extremely important in Maya astronomy. But if we get
into a discussion of Maya astronomy, we shall be stirring up a hornets'
nest. It is not relevant to the purposes of this book.
We can see that the astronomical systems in Egypt and Sumer were
absolutely identical in their fundamentals. Now these similarities between
Egypt and Sumer are a far different matter from similarities of names of
gods and religious concepts. One can always maintain that people in
different parts of the globe spontaneously produce identical sounds when
awe-struck by divine concepts. 'Everybody around the world says "Ma!" to
Mother,' as we have all heard many times.
The fact that this Akkadian text tentatively dated by Speiser at the Old
Babylonian period (i.e. the early part of the second millennium B.C.)
records an astronomical system of this complexity which is identical with
that of the Egyptian star clocks can be said to prove either contact
between these two civilizations or a common derivation for the system.
And it suggests a date which could serve as an upper limit. Culture contact
during which this information was shared could not have been any later.
Let any latest date accepted for the writing of the Enuma elish serve as an
upper limit. If this be done, we find the first millennium Bug. as the upper
limit, even for those who require incontrovertible physical proof. The
contact between Egypt and Sumer must have been considerably earlier if
direct, or it may not have been a contact, but rather a common derivation
(which was Wallis Budge's favored idea).
The Egyptian star clocks date from at least the reigns of Seti I (1303 1290
Bug.) and Ramses IV (1158 - 1152 Bug.) of the XlXth and XXth Dynasties
respectively, on the walls of whose tombs they are found. Therefore these
star clocks are at least as old as 1300 Bug. and seem to go back to the
very origins of Egyptian culture. By the first millennium b.c. they had been
changed and a fifteen-day week substituted for the ten-day week.
Other innovations took place as well at later dates, and the system fell
into a considerable decay and became, it seems, a relic. I should imagine
that a rise in the popularity of the sun god Ra made stars and especially
Sirius seem less important. In any case, the innate integrity of the Sirius
system in Egypt began to rot away and be ignored by the first millennium
b.c, as it was superseded by ideas more obvious and less esoteric to
impatient priests.
Perhaps when this began to happen some purists may have gone off to
other places where they hoped to retain the traditions without
interference from decadent Pharaohs. We shall return much later to this
idea, with some surprising information.
But let us return to Sumer and continue in hot pursuit. In Tablet VI of the
Enuma elish we find an interesting passage. In it are mentioned the
Anunnaki, who were the sons of An (An means 'heaven'), also known as
Anu the great god. These Anunnaki were fifty in number and were called
'the fifty great gods'. Nearly always these Anunnaki were anonymous, the
emphasis being on their number and their greatness and their control over
fate.
In fact, I feel it is safe to say that this Sumerian fragment is the earliest
known form of the story of that hero who was later to be named Jason. In
the story from this fragment, the hero, Gilgamesh, wishes to go to the
'land of the living', which is described as being in the charge of the sun
god Utu. In the story of Jason and the Argonauts, the hero, Jason, wishes to
search for the golden fleece, which is known to be a solar symbol.
As previously in the same tale, there has been the clear statement:
'The hero, his teeth are the teeth of a dragon', we may assume that
Gilgamesh's own teeth are probably being referred to - his own teeth
which have previously been described as being dragon's teeth!
Now in the lines following the putting of the teeth to the ground, we learn
that Gilgamesh needs to summon strength by putting his teeth to the
ground because he needs to fight. In the story of the Argo, Jason sows the
dragon's teeth in the ground, and from them spring up armed soldiers who
begin to fight - as is also the case in the story of Cadmus. So we see that
in the two Greek myths, as also in this Sumerian fragment, the dragon's
teeth go to the ground and a fight ensues where the hero has acquired
superhuman strength.
Later in this book we shall see the precise explanation of where this
curious jumble originated, that it is specifically derived from an Egyptian
sacred pun, and what it all means.
Meanwhile we must stay at our present level of enquiry. This book is an
anabasis, or journey upward.
Let us look a little closer at the story of Jason and the golden fleece. The
golden fleece was given to Phrixus and Helle by the god Hermes. The
Egyptian god Anubis became known to the Greeks as their own Hermes.
Furthermore, Diodorus Siculus (IV, 47) and Tacitus (Ann. VI, 34) explain
the golden fleece's origin by saying that Phrixus and Helle (who flew away
on the golden ram's back to Colchis, Helle falling in the Hellespont on the
way and giving that body of water its name) really sailed in a ship with a
ram's head on the prow, rather than having ridden the magical ram of the
story.
The fact that the more widespread myth which had an actual ram in the
story maintained specifically that they flew on the golden ram, could refer
to the idea of a celestial boat. Thus everyone is correct.
In any case, this boat would definitely have been a boat of Egypt, which to
the Sumerians would have been called a 'Magan-boat', if we accept what
Kramer and others believe, namely, that Magan is Egypt. And the boat was
a 'gift from Hermes' - in other words from Anubis. No wonder, then, that
the Sirius-related fifty is connected with the golden fleece as well as
Anubis.
It is worth mentioning also that the fifty Argonauts were also called the
Minyae, its they were all related to each other and of the same family,
descended all of them from Minyas, who had been the king of the Minyan
city of Orchomenus in Boeotia, in Greece. So Jason and the Argonauts, fifty
in number, all shared a kind of shadowy anonymity somewhat reminiscent
of the fifty Anunnaki of Sinner, as they were often referred to simply as
'the Minyae' - a group of fifty related oarsmen in a celestial boat.
Later on we shall look extremely closely at the Argo story and also at the
connections between the land Colchis, the object of its quest, and ancient
Egypt? as attested for us by the historian Herodotus. But we must
complete our look at the story of Gilgamesh and the Land of the Living.
For even a boat is mentioned in that fragment, corresponding to the Argo.
This, combined with the strange reference to teeth, seems to refer to the
children of the earth-goddess springing from the womb of the earth - for
Ki, the earth- goddess (ki means 'earth' in Sumerian) is also Nintu or 'the
goddess who gives birth'. (Ninmah means 'the great goddess' and
Ninhursag means 'the goddess of the hill, a hursag or hill having been
erected by her son - and she was named after it by him in commemoration
of a significant mythical event; in Egypt Anubis is also called 'Anubis of the
Hill', about which I shall have much to say later on, but suffice it here to
note that if the Sumerians were to speak of'Anubis of the Hill they would
call him Anpu-hursag.)
Basically in the goddess who gives birth, and also in the earth-goddess, we
thus find antecedents to the soldiers springing up from the dragon's teeth
sown in the earth, and also the throwing over his shoulder of the 'earth's
bones' (stones) by Deukalion, the Greek Noah, with the stones becoming
men much as the teeth did in the other stories. (And teeth are bones!)
In fact there are several points of contact other than this one between the
Deukalion and Jason stories. For the ark of Noah is a concept which is
identical with that of the ark of Deukalion, and both are magical ships in
which sit 'those who come out of the womb', in the sense that they
repopulate the world after the deluge. And both arks, but particularly that
of Deukalion, are concepts related to the Argo.
(As anyone who has read the full Epic of Gilgamesh will know, the ark of
Noah in the Middle East before either the Hebrews or the name Noah even
existed, was the ark of Ziusudra or the ark of Utnapishtim, and it occurs as
an established element of the mythical background brought into the Epic.)
For the ark of Deukalion rested on the mountain by the sacred oracle
grove of Dodona, from which the Argo received its cybernetic guiding
timber. Also, of course, the origin of the story of the flood and the ark
(containing as it does 'archetypes' of all living creatures in pairs, and the
word arche in Greek being definitely related to ark, as we shall see all too
well much later in this book) is Sumerian at least, if not even before that
something else (which we shall see in due course).
But it was from this early source that the Greeks obtained their Deukalion
and the Hebrews their Noah - both of which are extremely late forms of an
exceedingly ancient story, which existed thousands of years before there
were such things as either Greeks or Hebrews in existence. (Anyone really
interested in the origins of Greek and Hebrew civilizations should read
Professor Cyrus Gordon's brilliant book The Common Background of Greek
and Hebrew Civilizations3)
Now the point of going into all this is really to show that the Argonaut
motif of fifty heroes in a boat on a heroic quest exists in Sumer and forms
a complement to the 'fifty great gods'. For if the Magan-boat's fifty heroes
are seated, as the Anunnaki usually are, and are 'those who come forth
out of the womb', and thus children, so to speak, of Nintu, 'the goddess
who gives birth', then they may be directly equated with the Anunnaki.
For the Anunnaki, as the children of An, would also be the children of An's
ancient consort Ki or Nintu. In other words, the fifty heroes are heroic
counterparts of the celestial Anunnaki. The corollary of this is, that the fact
that there are fifty Anunnaki is not so likely to be a coincidence as might
have been thought. This brings out all the more the immense significance
of the number fifty.
The number occurs also in 'Gilgamesh, Enkidu, and the Nether World'.
There Gilgamesh dons armor which weighs 'fifty minas'. And in this tale
also Gilgamesh has fifty companions. In the later Babylonian version the
fifty companions are omitted from the story. At that date the true nature
of the symbolism of fifty must have been forgotten.
In his book The Sumerians, Kramer points out4 that cultic and symbolic
weapons, maces with fifty heads, were fashioned by the ruler Gudea.
If we return for a moment to the intriguing hursag of the Sumerians, the
strange 'hill', we must recall that Ninhursag the goddess of the hill is
identical with Nintu the goddess who gives birth. Those are two separate
names for the same deity. Now it is interesting to note that in Egyptian the
word tu means 'hill', so that if we take the word nin which means 'goddess'
and add the Egyptian tu we have 'the goddess of the hill', which in fact is a
synonym.
This is by no means the end of this interesting investigation. For if we note
that the Egyptian form of Horus (the son of Isis and Osiris) is Heru (which
is a bit like Hero, isn't it?) and the traditional usage in Egyptian is to speak
continually of Heru-sa-something which means Horus-the-son-of-
something, then we shall note that the strange and puzzling word hursag
might really be the Egyptian Heru-sa-Agga, which means 'Horus the son of
Agga9.
Curiously, as in the other tale, in this one also the boat is described as
having had the worst fate actually occur, for in line ninety-eight we learn
that 'the prow of the magurru-boat was cut down', just as in the previous
text we read:
'After the Magan-boat had sunk, /After the boat, "the might of Magilum",
had sunk.'
The connections between Egyptian and Sumerian words in sacred contexts
become so multifold that it is impossible to ignore the continuities
between the two cultures. Let us look, for instance, at the curious
phenomenon of the cedar which Gilgamesh is always being claimed to
have cut down. In 'Gilgamesh and the Land of the Living' Gilgamesh says:
'I would enter the land of the cutdown cedar' and later he is described as
he 'who felled the cedar', etc. That is
an early Sumerian text. In the actual Epic proper, as we have it, Gilgamesh
goes to the Cedar Mountain and slays the monster Humbaba (or Huwawa)
in 'the cedar mountain, the abode of the gods'. In Tablet V we read:
[Gilgamesh] seized [the axe in (his) hand]
[. . . and] felled [the cedar].
[But when Huwawa] heard the noise,
[He] became angry: 'Who has [come],
[Has slighted the trees, which] had been grown in my mountains,
And has felled the cedar?'
In Chapter XXII of Hamlet's Mill, Santillana and von Dechend identify
Huwawa with the planet Mercury. Now, remembering that Huwawa is also
the god of the cedar forest, it is interesting to note that in Egyptian the
word seb means 'cedar' and also means 'the planet Mercury'!
The subject is far more complicated than that, but I wanted to note the
further source of an Egyptian pun for yet another crucial Sumerian motif.
In other words, Huwawa is connected with both Mercury (the planet) and
the cedar, because the planet Mercury and the cedar are both called by
the same name in Egyptian - namely, seb.
Let us now put aside the enigmatic monster-god Huwawa and turn to the
Epic of Gilgamesh for another purpose. But in doing so let us note
Kramer's opinion in his essay 'The Epic of Gilgamesh and Its Sumerian
Sources',6 that 'the poem was current in substantially the form in which
we know it, as early as the first half of the second millennium B.C.'
Remember the Egyptian goddess Sati (or Satis) with her bow, who was
one of the three goddesses (one was Sothis and the third was Anukis)
riding in the celestial barque of Sothis (Sirius). Also recall the other
connections of the bow with Sirius, even in China. (And here one must
refer to the book Hamlet's Mill for many examples.11)
We continue:
After Anu had decreed the fate of the Bow,
And had placed the exalted royal throne before the gods,
Anu seated it in the Assembly of the gods.
The phrase 'the Assembly of the gods' invariably refers to the seated
assembly of the fifty Anunnaki. So it is clearly stated, we see, that this
'Bow Star' -the daughter of An - was placed by An on the exalted royal
throne in the midst of the fifty Anunnaki. In Egypt, Isis as Sothis was also
pictured as seated on a white royal throne in the heavens. She too was the
daughter of the sky god. Recall also that the hieroglyph for Ast (or Isis) is a
throne. And the hieroglyph for her husband Asar (or Osiris) is a throne
above an eye.
Before proceeding, we had better see who 'the seven gods of destiny' are.
They are often referred to as the seven Anunnaki of the underworld. This,
we shall see, also relates to the Sirius question. But the use of Anunnaki in
this way underscores the total anonymity of the term 'Anunnaki'. Needless
to say, none of these seven Anunnaki is ever identified as an individual
god. They are always 'the seven' underworld gods who determine destiny.
The strictly celestial Anunnaki are also known as the Igigi. No Sumerologist
has satisfactorily explained all this. It is terribly imprecise and confusing -
unless one had a structure to supply which fits under the cloth and
matches the contours and can thereby be accepted as a tentative basis of
explanation.
Now let us try to think of what we know is connected with the celestial
Anunnaki and Sirius which also fits into this idea of there being seven
Anunnaki-gods in the underworld. Remember that in both Sumer and
Egypt each god of significance in astronomical terms has his own ten-day
period or 'week'. If we multiply seven (gods) times ten days we get
seventy days. Is there any basis for this length of time being of
significance for the underworld in either Sumer or Egypt? Yes! In Egypt the
underworld is called the Duat (or Tuat) and the seventy-day period is very
significant there and relates intimately to Sirius, as we have seen in our
fairytale.
Parker and Neugebauer say12:
'It is here made clear that Sirius (Sothis) gives the pattern for all the other
decanal stars.'
Sirius was, astronomically, the foundation of the entire Egyptian religious
system. Its celestial movements determined the Egyptian calendar, which
is even known as the Sothic Calendar. Its heliacal rising marked the
beginning of the Egyptian year and roughly coincided with the flooding of
the Nile. (Plutarch says the Nile itself was sometimes called Sirius.)
This heliacal rising was the occasion of an important feast. One can
imagine a kind of New Year-cum-Easter. The heliacal rising was the
occasion when Sirius again rose into visibility in the sky after a period of
seventy days of being out of sight, during which time it was conceived of
as being in the Duat, or underworld. A further connection with Anubis
comes in here, as Anubis was conceived of as embalming Sothis for these
seventy days in the Duat. But as we all know, an embalmed mummy is
supposed to come alive again.
And this is what happens to the mummy of Sothis. Sothis is reborn on the
occasion of her heliacal rising. Parker and Neugebauer also say:13
'During the entire time of its purification it (Sothis, the star) was
considered dead and it was only with its rising again out of the Duat that it
could once more be considered as living.'
The Egyptians stubbornly clung to the traditional seventy days as the
prototype of an underworld experience, despite its inconvenience, and, as
we have already seen, 'Sirius gives the pattern for all the other decanal
stars'. In fact, it was the practice through all of Egyptian history for there
to be a period of precisely seventy days for the embalming of a human
mummy - in imitation of Sirius. Even during the late Ptolemaic period, the
embalming process invariably lasted the precise period of seventy days.
Thus we find the explanation of the seven Anunnaki of the underworld! It
is also interesting to note that in ancient Mexico the underworld was
thought to have seven caves.
It is worth noting that in the story Etana,14 about the legendary King
Etana not long after the Great Flood, who had to ascend to heaven in
order to have something done about his inability to have children (and
thereby managed to have a son and heir), mentions 'the divine Seven' and
describes them as Igigi, emphasizing the apparent interchangeability of
the terms Igigi and Anunnaki.
Also 'the great Anunnaki' are described as 'They who created the regions,
who set up the establishments'.
In the 'Descent of Ishtar to the Nether World' 15 the Anunnaki are
described as being brought forth (they are referred to as if they were
stuffed animals being brought out of a closet, dusted off, and displayed in
a taxidermists' contest) and seated on thrones of gold. Once more the
throne concept appears. It seems all the Anunnaki ever do is sit and be
symbolic.
Good little Anunnaki, like poodles, sit and smile at Anu. They are never
given personalities, poor fellows. I might mention that in this story the
nether world is described as having seven gates leading to seven
successive rooms (or caves). It is obvious that the period of seventy days
during which Sirius was 'in the underworld' to the Egyptians led to a
breaking down of the seventy days into ten-day weeks, each with a god,
giving seven gods.
But these seven gods of the underworld must not have personalities lest
there be the distraction of personal qualities to detract from the purely
numerical significance of the concept. And of course the seven rooms of
the seven gods are successive, leading from 'week' to 'week' until Sirius
again rises. So we see yet another essential link between the early
Sumerian concepts and the Egyptian concepts.
When will Professor Neugebauer take notice of this and cease ruminating
among the late Babylonians and Persians?
In later times the god Marduk usurped the central position of the pantheon
from all the other gods in Babylon. The Enuma elish is largely a description
of this process and is basically written to Marduk, telling of his honors. This
was quite an innovation, a real centralization of power.
So Asar-rutu could just as well be Asar-lutu, and the lingual 't' as opposed
to a dental 't' is pronounced rather like a 'd', being a softer sound. If we
merely transliterate it thus, we have Asar-ludu. It would mean, 'Osiris of
the growing plants'.
There is even an Egyptian precedent for the use of Tutu as one name of a
god who has many names. The Egyptian monster of darkness, Apep,
'possessed many names; to destroy him it was necessary to curse him by
each and every name by which he was known.'
To make quite sure that this should be done effectively, the Papyrus of
Nesi-Amsu adds a list of such names, and as they are the foundation of
many of the magical names met with in later papyri they are here
enumerated . . .18 And one of these is Tutu. Surely this almost identical
preoccupation with the need to enumerate every one of the magical
names of a god in both countries must have common origins - especially
as the name Tutu is in the lists of both countries.
It is important to look even closer at the Egyptian god Tutu. In Heidel's
translation of the Enuma elish he gives for Asaruludu the early Sumerian
epithet namshub as opposed to the late Babylonian form namru - both
meaning 'bright', and in the text further explained as, 'The bright god who
brightens our way'.'
SUMMARY
'The Black Rite' concerned something called 'Night' which was apparently
an object that moves in heaven along with 'the other mysteries in turn
that move in heaven, with ordered motions and periods of times'. It has
less light than the sun and it 'weaves a web with rapid light'.
Sirius B moves in heaven with ordered motion and period, has less light
than our sun, and distinctly weaves a web with its rapid motion, since it
revolves round Sirius A in much less time than the planets Uranus,
Neptune, and Pluto revolve around our own sun.
'Night' may thus refer to Sirius B, just as may 'black Osiris' and 'invisible
Nephthys'.
In really early times the basic concepts of Egyptian astronomy and
Sumerian astronomy were identical. Later many differences appeared.
Authorities on ancient astronomy tend to give short shrift to the earlier
times, hence the similarities between the two cultures in this particular
field have tended to go unremarked.
In Egypt and Sumer (Babylonia) there were identical systems of dividing
the calendar year into twelve months each composed of three weeks
which lasted ten days apiece. Each week had a constellation of the night
sky associated with it (which in modern parlance we might describe as
'being a kind of zodiac'). Thirty-six of these weeks added up only to 360
days, which was less than a year, so the 365-day year was obtained by
adding on five extra days at the end.
Identical systems of such complexity in these two cultures mean that the
relationship between Egypt and Sumer must be explored further.
In Sumer the 'fifty great gods' called the Anunnaki were anonymous as
individuals and only ever spoken of as 'the fifty great gods' with the
emphasis on their number. They were literally restricted to the level of
being a numerological cipher. They are continually invoked and are of
importance - but they never did anything but sit on their thrones and 'be
fifty'.
In an early Sumerian tale of their epic hero Gilgamesh, we find him
accompanied in his adventures by fifty heroes, reminiscent of the fifty
Argonauts who accompanied Jason. 'His teeth are the teeth of a dragon',
we are told - reminiscent of Jason sowing the dragon's teeth. And
Gilgamesh also puts his teeth to the ground (that much we can gather, but
the passage is obscure and he may really be sowing teeth).
Each of his fifty heroic companions carries a specially felled tree for the
journey - and the only reasonable purpose to go around carrying a tree
seems to be that these trees were used as oars, especially as there is an
association with a boat. This again is like the Argonauts. We thus seem to
have found a Near Eastern tale from which the tale of the Argonauts was
derived two thousand years or so later by the Greeks.
Gilgamesh somehow derives strength from putting his teeth to the
ground. In the Greek tale, Jason sows the teeth and they spring up as
strong soldiers - another parallel.
Anubis, who is now familiar to us from Egypt, was identified by the Greeks
with their own god Hermes (known in Latin as Mercury). Hermes turned
the Golden Fleece to gold originally, in the Greek myth. It was this same
Golden Fleece that Jason and the Argonauts sought in their quest, and
which they succeeded in seizing and taking away with them.
In the early Gilgamesh tale of the Sumerians, Gilgamesh and his fifty
proto-Argonauts have some connection with a ship (the text is
tantalizingly fragmented) called 'the Magan-boat'. It should be
remembered that Magan is the Sumerian name for Egypt.
Hence the boat is connected with Egypt.
All the Greek Argonauts were related to one another and more or less
anonymous as individuals - reminiscent of the earlier Sumerian 'fifty
heroes' accompanying Gilgamesh and also the 'fifty great gods' known as
Anunnaki.
The Greek ark of Deukalion came to rest after the Flood at Dodona, from
where the Argo received its guiding timber. The ark and the Argo
apparently were related in other ways too.
Professor Cyrus Gordon has written an important book on common origins
of Greek and Hebrew cultures from the Egyptian-Sumerian milieu of the
cosmopolitan world of the ancient Mediterranean (see bibliography).
The 'fifty great gods' of Sumer, the Anunnaki, are invariably seated.
Sacred oarsmen or Argonauts are all, of course, invariably seated while
they are rowing. 'The fifty who sit' and 'the fifty who sit and row' seem to
be a motif.
The other element besides the eye in the Osiris-name hieroglyph is the
throne, which is the hieroglyph for Isis as well. The throne is a divine seat.
The Sumerians frequently intoned of the Anunnaki that they were 'they
who are seated on their thrones'; or sometimes for a bit more drama, 'the
fifty great gods took their seats'. (Of course they did nothing even then.)
The Egyptian Anubis (Anpu) was a god 'of the hill'. The Sumerian god
Anu's wife was a goddess 'of the hill'.
The older form of the Sumerian word for hill, hursagga, may be derived
from the Egyptian Heru-sa-agga, where 'agga' refers to Anubis (who was
'of the hill'). There are many other word and name similarities between
Egypt and Sumer.
In the Epic of Gilgamesh a dream of Gilgamesh is described where he
encounters a heavy star that cannot be lifted despite immense effort. This
star descends from heaven to him and is described as connected with Anu
(who is the god of heaven). Thus we find 'the heavy star' concept in
Babylonia long before the Arabs even existed and were to have their star
in the Great Dog (and the other in Argo) called 'Weight' and described as
'the heavy star'.
Gilgamesh is drawn to this heavy star irresistibly, in a manner described in
a way that seems to hint at a kind of gravitational attraction (to those,
that is, who are conscious of a 'heavy star' like Sirius B being
gravitationally powerful as well as 'heavy').
The Epic of Gilgamesh refers to 'the essence of Anu' possessed by the
star. The word rendered as 'essence' is used elsewhere in medical
contexts referring to 'concentration, essence' - an intimation of super-
dense matter? This 'concentrated star essence of Anu' was too heavy for
Gilgamesh to lift in his dream.
It must be recalled that Gilgamesh had his fifty companions in the early
versions of the Epic (they were discarded later, by Babylonian times).
Hence connected with Gilgamesh we find:
Fifty anonymous companions seemingly important only as a numerological
element in the story and in later times discarded as useless,
A super-heavy star connected with An (also an Egyptian name of Osiris,
husband of Isis who was identified with Sirius),
A description of the star as being composed of a 'concentrated essence'
and of having extreme powers of attraction described in a manner
reminiscent of gravitational attraction.
These elements comprise almost a complete description of Sirius B: a
super-heavy gravitationally powerful star made of concentrated super-
dense matter ('essence') with the number fifty associated with it
(describing its period?) - and connected with An (Anu), which we know to
be linked in Egypt (and Gilgamesh's 'Magan-boat' seems Egyptian) with
Sirius.
The Hounds of Hell
Since Sirius is the Dog Star, let us turn to the dog-headed Sumerian
goddess Bau. According to Thorkild Jacobsen,1 'Bau seems originally to
have been goddess of the dog and her name, Bau, to have constituted an
imitation of the dog's bark, as English "bowwow".* Bau was also the
daughter of An. So here the dog-goddess is the daughter of An, whereas in
Egypt the dog-god was himself An-pu (Anubis).
* In Egyptian a word for 'dog, jackal', is Auau, which probably has the
same 'dog's bark' derivatlon as the Sumerian Bau.
Since the fifty Anunnaki were children of An, and Bau is a daughter of An,
it is not far-fetched to see in Bau a survival (for she is an old goddess who
faded into obscurity in later times) of the concept of a dog-star goddess
equivalent to his as Sothis. And it is interesting that she was dog-headed.
For Anubis was not entirely a jackal or dog, he was merely jackal- or dog-
headed.
Bau's husband Ninurta was the son of Enlil. Just as Marduk usurped the
position of chief god, at a somewhat earlier time Enlil had usurped this
position from An. (The situation is analogous to Greek mythology where
Cronos usurped the position of Uranus and was in turn overthrown by
Zeus.) There is an interesting 170-line hymn to Enlil2 which seems to
describe a stellar abode for the god. The 'lifted eye' or 'lifted light'
scanning and searching the lands sounds reminiscent of the Dogon
concept of the ray of Digitaria which once a year sweeps the Earth.
In any case, a 'lifted light' which searches and scans is definitely a beam
or ray, and is in its own right an interesting concept for the Sumerians to
have had as situated in the celestial abode. I must emphasize in advance
for the reader that lapis lazuli was considered by the Sumerians to
represent the night sky. Here then are significant excerpts from the hymn:
Enlil, whose command is far-reaching, whose word is holy, The lord whose
pronouncement is unchangeable, who forever decrees destinies, Whose
lifted eye scans the lands, Whose lifted light searches the heart of all the
lands,
Enlil who sits broadly on the white dais, on the lofty dais . . .
The lofty white dais of Sothis-Sirius is an Egyptian concept. It is Ast (Isis).
It is also Asar (Osiris), with the addition of a hieroglyphic eye. Later we find
in this hymn from Sumer the city of Nippur's temple in comparison:
Nippur - the shrine, where dwells the father, the 'great mountain',
Father Enlil, Has established his seat on the dais of the Ekur, lofty shrines;
Its divine laws are like the divine laws of the abyss,
And:
The Ekur, the lapis-lazuli house, the lofty dwelling place, awe-inspiring, Its
awe and dread are next to heaven, Its shadow is spread over all the lands
Its loftiness reaches heaven's heart.
These mentions of the lapis lazuli aspect of Enlil's abode and also that it
reaches heaven's heart make quite clear that we are not merely dealing
with a solar description. It is not the sun but a stellar abode that is being
distinctly described. Hence the references to the ray or beam are all the
more curious as they do not refer to the sun's light as might have been
thought from a superficial reading.
We continue:
Heaven - he is its princely one; earth - he is its great one, The Anunnaki -
he is their exalted god; When in his awesomeness, he decrees the fates,
No god dare look on him.
Here we see Enlil has been called the exalted god over the Anunnaki (in
other texts his son Enki, or Ea, boasts that he is their 'big brother' and
leader). Here Enlil has also himself been given the power of decreeing the
fates, which the Anunnaki traditionally do themselves. In the fourth line
from the end above, 'heaven' is An and 'earth' is Ki. An and Ki were
married. The compound an-ki is Sumerian for 'heaven-earth' and is the
word meaning 'universe'. Note the similarity between an-ki and the name
of the Egyptian goddess Anukis who is identified with Sothis-Sirius. Also, of
course, the similarity to the name Anunnaki.
Now the many similarities between Sumer and Egypt which we have so far
noted (with more to come), which have led us to consider the possibility of
the two nations having been in some way linked, may be referred to in a
most interesting passage from Josephus,3 in which 'the children of Seth'
are mentioned. Many ancient writers supposed Seth to have been Hermes
Trismegistus.
This fact may suddenly be more important in the light of what we have
begun to suspect about a scantily surviving authentic Hermetic tradition
(maligned and obscured by a welter of useless, trivial co-survivals from
later times).
'The children of Seth' were the inventors of that peculiar sort of wisdom
which is concerned with the heavenly bodies, and their order; and that
their inventions might not be lost before they were sufficiently known,
upon Adam's prediction, that the world was at one time to be destroyed by
the force of fire, and at another time by the violence and quantity of
water, they made two pillars, the one of brick, the other of stone.
They described their discoveries on them both, that in case the pillar of
brick should be destroyed by the flood, the pillar of stone might remain,
and exhibit those discoveries to mankind, and also inform them that there
was another pillar of brick erected by them. Now this remains in the land
of Syria or Seirad to this day.
This passage calls forth many comments. The point which immediately
springs to one's notice is that there is a 'pillar of brick' in the land of Syria,
or in the land of Sumer-Akkad-Babylonia.
Well, this is the very land of brick! It is the land of the brick ziggurat or
'great mountain' - a giant pillar if you like. But where is the land of stone?
Why, it is obviously Egypt, the land of the great stone pyramids. Here,
then, is a description of two linked cultures, one building brick edifices and
the other building stone edifices.
In Egypt we have the Great Pyramid, which so many people have believed
to contain in its basic construction the proportions and measurements to
demonstrate that it was constructed by highly advanced and civilized
men. The great ziggurats of Babylon and other cities, too, though in a
more ruinous state, seem to embody in their construction much that is
profound. Can it be that Josephus has preserved a tradition of the link
between Egypt and Sumer and their respective types of building ? He says
the link was an astronomically-defined one.
'The children of Seth' first possessed 'that peculiar sort of wisdom which is
concerned with the heavenly bodies'. Well, we have already discovered for
ourselves that the fundamental astronomical and astronomical-religious
concepts were common to earliest Egypt and Sumer. And here is Josephus
telling us the same thing, and what is more, telling us what the treatise
'The Virgin of the World' would have us know - that it all began with
Hermes Trismegistus in the way we have previously discussed.
For if you sail through the Hellespont (named after Helle, who fell from the
golden ram) into the Black Sea (called the Euxine Sea by the Greeks), and
follow the coast of present-day Turkey until you come to the region of the
border with the Soviet Union of today, you will have come to Colchis. It is a
pretty strange place for the Greeks to attach so much importance to. It
sits at the loot of the formidable Caucasus Mountains and not far away are
the Georgian people who live in their mountains to such amazing ages as
a hundred and ten, with a culture peculiarly their own. Not far to the south
is that strange place, Mount Ararat, where the ark of Noah landed after the
Flood.
Surely this is a most unusual land, and far removed from the Greek world.
Or is it?
Minyas had a great-grandson called Phrixus. Phrixus had four sons who
lived in Colchis, to which he had fled on the back of the golden ram and
where he gave the golden fleece to the local King of Colchis, and in return
was made welcome and married the king's daughter. It is obvious that
these four sons were only half-Colchian and would feel some loyalty
towards their father's homeland which was in mainland Greece. Sure
enough, on his deathbed Phrixus asked his sons to return to Orchomenos,
his home in Greece, to reclaim their birthright there.
This they agreed to do. For Phrixus's father had been the King of
Orchomenos (as had Minyas) and these sons should be able to claim what
honor and position (not to mention more material matters) was rightly
theirs. However, they knew that setting things straight might be a bit
difficult, as their father and his sister Helle (who fell into the Hellespont)
had left in rather a hurry on the golden ram with the blessing of Hermes,
but not with too many tears being shed in Orchomenos at the time.
So these four sons set out and were shipwrecked but were fortunately
picked up and rescued. Who rescued them? None other than our fifty
Argonauts who were just passing. In fact, these Argonaut cousins of theirs
were at that moment just happening by on their way to Colchis where
their mission was to try to get that fleece back. The four young fellows had
no objection to such a plan, especially as they were also descended from
Minyas.
The Argonauts had been losing some of their men (for instance, Hercules
and Hylas had vanished; Hylas was dragged down into a stream by a
passionate water nymph and Hercules went berserk and wandered off into
Turkey calling his name in vain, later founding cities and doing various
Herculean things). So these four fellows from Colchis were just the thing to
recharge the ranks.
But what about this place Colchis ? Perhaps if we examine it we shall find
some Egyptian connections. Anything seems to be possible in a magical
land like this.
Herodotus continues:
My own idea on the subject was based first on the fact that they have
black skins and woolly hair (not that that amounts to much, as other
nations have the same), and secondly, and more especially, on the fact
that the Colchians, the Egyptians, and the Ethiopians are the only races
which from ancient times have practised circumcision.
The Phoenicians and the Syrians of Palestine themselves admit that they
adopted the practice from Egypt, and the Syrians who live near the rivers
Thermodon and Parthenius, learnt it only a short time ago from the
Colchians. No other nations use circumcision, and all these are without
doubt following the Egyptian lead.
As between the Egyptians and the Ethiopians, I should not like to say
which learned from the other, for the custom is evidently a very ancient
one; but I have no doubt that the other nations adopted it as a result of
their intercourse with Egypt, and in this belief I am strongly supported by
the fact that Phoenicians, when they mix in Greek society, drop the
Egyptian usage and allow their children to go uncircumcized.
And now I think of it, there is a further point of resemblance between the
Colchians and Egyptians: they share a method of weaving linen different
from that of any other people; and there is also a similarity between them
in language and way of living.*
On with the story and those Argonauts. I said that Orpheus was included in
the cast by that great film producer Apollonius of Rhodes. But another
competing film producer, Pherecydes, insisted that Orpheus was not an
Argonaut. Diodorus Siculus, a great supporter of women's lib, maintained
that Atalanta was an Argonautess.
Apollonius says pointedly that super-star Theseus was in Hades at the
time and otherwise engaged (with another contract), but Statius (who was
obviously with the other studio) later made Theseus an Argonaut anyway.
H. W. Parke has pointed out that the Apolline seers were apparently
injected into the Argonaut story as a propaganda effort by the rising
power of the Delphic Oracle which was trying to squeeze out the premier
oracle of Dodona and achieve first place for itself in the eyes of the Greek
public.
Parke has shown how the really central oracular elements in the Argo
story were all related to Dodona, not Delphi. Delphi was quite an upstart in
the centuries immediately preceding the classical period, and initially was
not more important than Dodona, though it was to become so and held
precedence by the time of Socrates and the classical Greeks.
Parke concludes that all the Delphic and Apolline elements in the Argo
story are late accretions from the time after Delphi had usurped the
primacy of Dodona. They would not have been in the Argo epic referred to
by Homer, who proves the antiquity of the Argo saga by his mention in the
Odyssey (XII, 69-72) of 'the celebrated Argo' and of Jason and the Clashing
Rocks.
They were fifty and they were related and usually seated and they sailed
in a magic boat. Just like the Anunnaki, and just like the fifty anonymous
companions of Gilgamesh! And in the Gilgamesh fragments from the early
Sumerian times, the boat mentioned is a 'Magan-boat', or Egyptian boat. It
must be remembered also that Sumer is located between Egypt and
Colchis.
We are now beginning to get down to the bare bones of the Argo story. I
don't believe that the earliest levels of this ancient tale have ever
previously been reached.
Not only Herodotus, but Pindar as well, describes the Colchians as dark. In
his IVth Pythian Ode, which is largely about the Argonauts, Pindar says
(212): 'Among the dark-faced Kolchians, in the very presence of Aeetes'.
Pindar therefore confirms Herodotus on this point.
Here is a description of the site, for those who wish to seek it:
'They reached the broad estuary of the Phasis, where the Black Sea
ends . . . and then rowed straight up into the mighty river, which rolled in
foam to either bank as it made way for Argo's prow. On their left hand
they had the lofty Caucasus and the city of Aea, on their right the plain of
Ares and the god's sacred grove, where the snake kept watch and ward
over the fleece, spread on the leafy branches of an oak.' (Another hint of
Dodona, with the oak and the grove. This similarity will be seen to become
extremely relevant later on.)
The Egyptian star clocks to which they bear such total resemblance
calendrically had already altered (such as by the introduction of a fifteen-
day week instead of a ten-day one, indicating the advanced degeneration
of the traditions) in Egypt in the first millennium B.C.
Hence we see that the Egyptian star clocks no longer existed in the
necessary form by the first millennium, giving us an upper limit date in
Egypt of the end of the second millennium B.C., identical with the upper
limit we have in Sumer. I am tempted now to steal a phrase of the
physicists and remind the reader that these dates are of an order of
magnitude comparable with the date of Ramses II's reign adopted
tentatively for the settlement at Colchis of Egyptian colonists.
Surely these three dates cannot coalesce accidentally round the same
material! We have no choice but to adopt the approximate date of 1200
B.C. as the upper limit for the spread (and subsequent degeneration) of
our Sirius-related material throughout the Mediterranean area, from
whichever source it originated.
It may perhaps be of some relevance that this coincides roughly with the
end of Minoan domination of the Mediterranean. From the point of view at
least of the spread of the Sirius material, I would connect it with what
seems to me an obvious fact: that when Minoan sea power, based on
Crete, collapsed, the Egyptians and inhabitants of the Near East could and
did expand their own maritime activities to fill the vacuum left by the
disintegration of the Minoan fleets.
But not, surely, if volcanic eruptions had enfeebled the Minoans. The
Minoan cities had no walls. On their island the Minoans relied, it seems, on
their unchallenged sea power to keep enemies at bay, just as the Spartans
in their unwalled city of Sparta in mainland Greece relied on their
unchallenged land power to keep enemies at bay in late classical times.
For the Cretan island could not be reached by enemies on foot, and as the
Minoans had total naval superiority they could not be threatened at home.
The latest conclusions about Thera seem to be that the towns on that
small volcanic island near Crete were first evacuated due to earthquakes
some years before the final volcanic eruption which destroyed Minoan
civilization.
If the Minoan fleets had been sunk in great tidal waves following volcanic
eruptions, the Minoans would have had no choice but to come to an
understanding with the Mycenaeans. Any other possibility would have
meant suicide. Probably they made a graceful and dignified pact or series
of pacts which made the inevitable seem voluntary. And if the
Mycenaeans were traditionally a good bit in awe of the more sophisticated
Minoans, so much the better for the Minoans who 'condescended' to come
to terms like gentlemen.
But the 'spheres of influence' of the sea-going Minoans could not be taken
over immediately by the Mycenaeans, who lacked the maritime skill (not
to mention ships) to complement on the waves their success in
overrunning most of the island of Crete, probably leaving certain areas to
the native Minoans according to the pacts I have suggested.
It is not that the Mycenaeans would have lacked the energy or will, but the
Minoan fleets would have been destroyed and even the most willing
Minoan sailors could not sail non-existent ships for the Mycenaean
invaders. Furthermore, the work of consolidating power on the recently
taken island would have been a protracted and distracting matter for the
Mycenaeans.
So, for all these reasons, the new Cretan rulers could not attain to the full
stature of their predecessors and be in complete command of the
Mediterranean Sea.
The Mycenaeans had been competing with the Minoans (and raiding them,
apparently under Theseus) as best they could for some time before the
cataclysm. In fact F. H. Stubbings6 informs us that the Minoans made a
'disastrous Sicilian expedition' against the Mycenaean trading interests in
the central Mediterranean. This is reminiscent, of course, of the famous
Athenian expedition to Sicily which was a total disaster and caused Athens
to lose the Peloponnesian War. Sicily was thus responsible for two great
historical disasters that altered the course of events to an unknown extent
elsewhere than in Sicily.
So we see the Minoan power may already have been declining. Stubbings
says: 'All that is really certain, however, is that the fall of Crete laid the
way clear for a vastly increased Mycenaean activity.' And, we may be
sure, for a vastly increased Egyptian maritime activity as well. Egypt,
which is known to have traded heavily with Crete under the Minoans, must
have found itself without choice: expanded maritime activity on her own
account or a severe starvation of imported goods.
There may even be a possibility that the name Minyas (and, hence,
Minyae for the Argonauts) may have some connection with Minos (which
gave us the word Minoan). After all, the Minoans were in considerable
contact with the Egyptians and were the best sailors of their day.
It has been worth while to go into all this about the Minoan collapse at
about the time of the upper limit dates which we have arrived at in other
ways. For with the disappearance of Minoan supremacy at sea, vast
numbers of other people were free to ply the sea lanes and no doubt did
so, bringing a proliferation of variegated contacts between cultures which
the uniform Minoan sea traffic had ironed flat and featureless.
All these folk suddenly let loose on the high seas brought an inevitable
cross-fertilization at the cultural level, even if piracy must have increased
alarmingly.
There must have been a lot more drowned sailors and shipwrecked
merchants, but an amazing amount of syncretism, during which our Sirius
material must have leaked out into wider currency beyond the confines of
Egypt and Sumer, Two millennia earlier, or even before that, the Egyptian
and Sumerian cultures had shared many secrets: now these secrets were
let out of Pandora's box and entered what was to become the Greek
culture through synthesis in the white heat of warlike Mycenaean exploits
at Troy and elsewhere.
The Heroic Age was beginning, arete (the classical Greek ideal of
excellence in all things) was to be forged by blood and iron in the lost
Thebaid and the surviving Iliad, with the subsidiary sources of the great
Odyssey and what remains of the Argo tales. Deeply imbedded like subtle
dragon's teeth sunk in tough battle flesh, the bony outline of our Sirius
material was to peer through the membrane of Greek epic tradition, to
spring forth now in our century as the armed men of controversy.
They have re-entered the field, we must face them. Rather than enter into
combat, let us question these strangers about their origins. We are faced
with the living fossils of a world almost entirely beyond our modern
comprehension. These creatures are shaggy with the cobwebs of the
centuries that preceded even classical Greece, and came before even
Hesiod and Homer. These ghosts are antique in a sense which we rarely
encounter except inside the tombs of Egypt or the burials at Ur.
Naturally, the Greeks would have thought of the falcon in terms of their
death-goddess Hecate.*
* Hesiod's account of Hecate shows her to have been the original Triple-
goddess, supreme in Heaven, on earth, and in Tartarus; but the Hellenes
emphasized her destructive powers at the expense of her creative
ones . . . Lion, dog, and horse (were) her heads ... the dog being the Dog-
star Sirius': Robert Graves, The Greek Myths, 31.7. Hesiod says (Theogony
416): In starry Heaven she has her place, and the immortal gods greatly
respect her'.
The springing up from the earth of the magically sown soldiers in the
Argonautica must partially refer to the Egyptian soldiers buried in 'the
cemetery of Circe' who were meant to rise from the dead under the
auspices of the Egyptian god of resurrection, Horus, whose symbol was
the falcon, or 'circe'. (Excavations could unearth the Colchian necropolis
some day.)
Circe lived on the island of Aea, which has the same name as the city
which Jason visited in Colchis and from where Medea came. In Greek
mythology, Circe is the daughter of Helios and Perse and the sister of King
Aeetes, the king of Colchis. She is therefore Medea's aunt (Medea eloped
with Jason). As for the 'island' of Aea, I believe it was a holm, or river-
island, in the Phasis River near the city Aea.
Circe's father Helios is the sun, who rose every morning from his
magnificent palace near Colchis where he slept and stabled his horses
overnight. And likewise the father of the Egyptian Horus was the sun, and
Horus himself represents the rising sun. The Greek word (kirke latinized as
circe) revealingly means 'an unknown bird', if we consult (as we shall do
from now on) Liddell and Scott's definitive Greek lexicon. In the form
(kirkos) the meaning is 'a kind of hawk or falcon', 'a kind of wolf, 'a circle'
(which in Latin became circus) or 'ring', and 'an unknown stone'. (kirkaia)
means 'an uncertain plant'.
Of these only the proper noun " (Kirke) has the specific meaning of Circe
the Enchantress, although the same word in general is 'an unknown bird'.
How appropriate a reaction for the Greeks to the falcon of Horus - a bird-
symbol unknown to them.
But in trying to be more precise they make (kirkos) 'a kind of hawk or
falcon', as that is obviously what it is from its appearance, though its
especial symbolic value makes the Greeks doubt precisely what the
Egyptians intended. It looked like a kind of hawk or falcon but the Greeks
weren't prepared to insist on exactly what species - because it was an
Egyptian, not a Greek, idea.
'A poetic and mystical name for a Hawk: the sacred Hawk of Apollo; in the
main an astronomical, perhaps solar, emblem. ... In Homer, the bird of
Apollo . . . Od. xv. 525. .. . The bird is not identifiable as a separate
species, and is so recognized by Scaliger and others. Neither the brief note
as to its size in a corrupt passage of the ninth book of the History of
Animals, nor the mystical references to its alleged hostilities and
attributes in Aristotle, Aelian, and Phile, are sufficient to prove that the
name indicated at any time a certain particular species. The word is
poetical . . . The chief allusions to are obviously mystical, though the
underlying symbolism . . . is not decipherable.'
Under another entry, for Hierax, Thompson gives some further interesting
information. The word hierax is a generic term for all hawks. It too seems
to partake of overtones of Horus, as Thompson specifically notes when he
refers to the 'Worship of Hawks in Egypt', citing Herodotus and Aelian, and
says:
'In the Rig-Veda the sun is frequently compared to a hawk, hovering in the
air. . . . Their heart is eaten, to obtain prophetic powers, Porph. De Abst. ii.
48.9 . . . The Hawk entered in Egypt into innumerable hieroglyphics . . .
(as) Horus and Hat-Hor, the latter being the of Plutarch. According to
Chaeremon, fr. 8 On the sanctity of hawks in Egypt, and the solar
symbolism associated with them there, see also . . .'etc., referring to
Porphyry, Plutarch, Eusebius and Clement of Alexandria.
The scholarly reader who wishes to pursue all this must go to Thompson
directly.
Kirkos also means 'an unknown stone'. Here again we come upon the
stone motif which we encounter with Deukalion (the Greek Noah) and
elsewhere. The stones of Deukalion spring up as men - men born from the
earth just as the dead of the Colchian cemetery are meant to be born
again from the earth.
A further connection of Circe with the Sirius complex lies in the fact10 that
the island of Circe was the place where Orion met his death. Orion as a
constellation was identified (as Sah) with Osiris, the husband of Isis, who
was identified, of course, with Sirius.
The stone motif in its recurring forms seems to have had a particular
connection with the Minyae, as I discovered from that invaluable duffle-
bag of information, the ancient Greek author Pausanius, whose Guide to
Greece is a real 'experience'. The Minyan city was traditionally that of
Orchomenos in Boeotia, and it will be recalled that all the Argonauts were
Minyae and descended from Minyas, King of Orchomenos.
'the sacred enclosure of Laphystian Zeus . . . The statue is stone. They say
Athamas was about to slaughter Phrixos and Helle here when Zeus sent
the children a ram with a golden fleece and they ran away on the ram.'
Now note what Pausanius says (38, 1) about the Minyae of Orchomenos:
Levi adds:
'The ruins of these sanctuaries are on the site of the old monastery (now
itself in ruins).'
The public furore in 1973 over the painting by Titian, The Death of
Actaeon, will have reminded British art lovers of the background to the
myth which the famous painting portrays. Actaeon happened to see the
goddess Artemis (known to the Romans by her Latin name of Diana) of the
silver bow bathing naked.
Artemis then hunted him down, with fifty hounds, transformed him into a
stag, and killed him with her bow (not only are hounds connected with the
Dog Star, but the bow is a familiar symbol connected also with Sirius,
which was so often known in ancient times also as the Bow Star).*
* This scene is portrayed in Plate 17, which shows an ancient Greek vase
painting from approximately 470 B.C. of Artemis and the hounds slaying
Actaeon.
Not only were the hounds of Hades who chased Actaeon fifty in number,
but Robert Graves tells us,
'Actaeon was, it seems, a sacred king of the pre-Hellenic stag cult, torn to
pieces at the end of his reign of fifty months, namely half a Great
Year . . .'11
Note the application of the number 'fifty' here to a period of time. The
orbit of Sirius B around Sirius A is fifty years; the reign of a sacred stag-
king was fifty months. We know how often in ancient traditions the
numerical quantity of time periods remains stable while their quality (as
individual durations) varies.
The classic examples are in the Bible, where the seven days of creation
refer to seven aeons, and the 'years' of life of the Hebrew patriarchs such
as Methusaleh are not correctly interpreted as solar years but as lunar
months or 'lunar years' a month long (since by late times the area of the
Near East which had by then produced the people known as Hebrews had
succumbed to a lunar calendrical craze - literally 'moonstruck' - and
everything was a lunar rather than a solar period of time to those people
in that area).
** The Dogon tribe often describe the 50-year orbital period of Sirius B by
saying: 'The period of the orbit is counted double, that is, one hundred
years, because . . . (of) the principle of twin-ness' (see Chapter 1). Here we
have the same custom in operation among the Greeks, of 'twinning' their
sacred durations for 50X2 =100. Hecate ('one hundred') unites them.
Not only are the stories mythical and symbolical in that they are not
meant to be taken at face value, but they even involve 'characters' and
'events' which have a strictly numerical significance. But this should have
been quite obvious to the reader since we began to study the Anunnaki. It
is, admittedly, difficult for those of us who have been brought up in our
strictly literal civilization, where there is no such thing as a hidden
meaning and everything is on the surface, to think in such a way as to
understand the ancient myths.
It was, after all, only a century ago that supposedly intelligent people were
maintaining that the Earth was created in 4004 B.C., on the basis of what
the Bible was reputed to have said! And it is only half a century ago that
the courts of Tennessee in the famous Scopes trial decided that the theory
of evolution was not only unholy but illegal and could not be taught in the
schools.
Now we have seen that Actaeon was associated with Minyan Orchomenos,
with a rock-throwing ghost (echoes of Deukalion), with fifty hounds of
Hades, and with a reign of fifty months. The connections go even further.
From Pausanius (34, 4) we learn that on Mount Laphystion is the place
described thus: 'Higher up (from the spot where the ram with the golden
fleece leapt into the air and took off) is Fire-eyed Hercules where the
Boeotians say Hercules came up with the dog of Hades.'
Now, this 'dog of Hades' is Cerberus, who originally had fifty heads! (Later
the simplification of three heads, as for Hecate who was also of Hades,
was adopted for Cerberus, when fifty must have seemed to make no sense
and was probably too difficult to paint on vases. But of course three is
significant too. The Egyptians portrayed three goddesses in the Sothis-
boat: Sothis, Anukis, and Satis.)
Graves informs us13 that, 'Cerberus was, at first, fifty-headed, like the
spectral pack that destroyed Actaeon (see 22.1); but afterwards three-
headed, like his mistress Hecate (see 134.1).' (The three-headed Hecate is
the three Sothisgoddesses blended in one and is an underworld
counterpart, just as with the Sumerian 'Anunnaki of the underworld'.)
What of the fleece itself? There are obvious connections of the golden
fleece and Colchis with the common golden-yellow dye which comes from
saffron (crocus sativus). The crocus with its saffron is even today confused
with 'meadow saffron' (colchicum) which takes its name, obviously, from
Colchis, which was its chief area of production.
The colchicum plant which somewhat resembles the crocus in its flowering
stage was terribly important to the ancient world. It was the only known
medicine against the disease of gout (and indeed still is). It is known to
have been used to treat gout in ancient Egypt and all over the Ancient
Mediterranean.
As Colchis was the place to find colchicum that may explain why the
Egyptians first settled there!
It is probable that the crocus and ordinary saffron was present in Colchis in
abundance, along with the false or meadow saffron, colchicum, and that
the the two became as confused with each other in ancient times as they
are today. Indeed, it is only modern botany which proclaims a difference
between the two to the extent that we no longer confuse them officially.
Richard Allen17 discusses Aries (the ram) and says that 'Miss Clerke says
that the (Egyptian stellar ram's) stars were called the Fleece.' He adds
that the god Zeus-Amen (Ammon)-Jupiter 'assumed the Ram's form when
all the inhabitants of Olympus fled into Egypt from the giants led by
Typhon'. And in this discussion of Aries, Allen mentions 'some of its titles
at a different date being applied to Capella of Auriga'.
This is the sort of process we shall encounter again and again - titles and
descriptions of stars being applied to neighbouring or similar stars as the
original traditions become confused. It is particularly evident in the
application of the description of 'heavy' or 'weight' to different stars
associated somehow with Sirius, as the original object to which this
description was meant to apply, Sirius B, was not visible and so tradition,
being conservative, kept the description and applied it to other stars
related to Sirius which could actually be seen. As with numerical traditions
like that of 'fifty', when the true significance was forgotten, the symbol or
concept was merely given a new, impromptu explanation.
It always was Aries with the Romans; but Ovid called it phrixea ovis; and
Columella pecus athamantidos helles, phrixus, and portitor phrixi; others
phrixeum pecus and phrixi vector, Phrixus being the hero-son of Athamas,
who fled on the back of this Ram with his sister Helle to Colchis. . . . On
reaching his journey's end, Phrixus sacrificed the creature and hung its
fleece in the Grove of Ares, where it was turned to gold and became the
object of the Argonauts' quest. From this came others of Aries' titles: ovis
aurea and auratus, chrysomallusy and the Low Latin Chrysovellus.
As the fleece was a solar symbol, it is just as well that we look at the
concept of Horus once again. Horus in Egyptian is Heru. And from Wallis
Budge we learrn that Heru is 'the ancient name of the Sun-god'.18 The
word heru also has the meaning of 'face'.18
But let us consider the following: Heru (Horus) and his hawk/falcon
presided over the Colchian cemetery and gave the name to Circe (which
means 'hawk/falcon') who was Medea's aunt. The Greek sun-god Helios
was said to stable his horses at Colchis and have a magnificent palace
there, from which he arose every morning. Also Colchis was the place of
residence of the solar golden fleece.
Now, we recall that in Egyptian the letter 'L' and the letter 'R' are entirely
interchangeable and have the same hieroglyph. Consequently, Heru could
just as reliably be Helu. If one takes Helu and puts a Greek ending on it
one gets Helios! And the same word means the sun-god in both the
Egyptian religion (early) and the Greek religion (early). In both lands the
name was eventually superseded, in Greece by Apollo, for instance. So
here we have a further connection between the Greek tradition as
centering around Colchis and the Egyptian tradition as settled there, only
this time the evidence is linguistic.
It seems that the curious Greek word hero comes also from heru, though a
word similar to hero exists in Sanskrit, the language of ancient India after
1200 B.C. The word in Sanskrit which has the meaning of 'hero' is the
related Vira. It is used in the precise sense of 'hero (as opposed to a god)'
in the early Rig-veda and is thus attested at the time of the first
migrations of Aryans into India. There is no question that the two words
are cognates of each other. However, I propose for them (and we shall see
more examples of this later in the book) a common derivation: from the
Egyptian heru.
The word heru is given a meaning by Wallis Budge20 almost identical with
that of hero and vira and is described as follows: 'applied to the king as
the representative of the sun-god on earth'. This is a precise meaning
applying to a human being on earth who is neither god nor daemon, but
hero. Liddell and Scott make clear that the word was not used solely for
those warriors who were prominent in battle, but was used to describe the
minstrel Demodocus, the herald Mulius, and even (in the Odyssey, 7, 44)
'the unwarlike Phaeacian people are so called'.
In Homer 'the heroes were exalted above the race of common men', but
particularly in Pindar the poet, we find the word used to describe a race
'between gods and men', in precisely the sense that we should expect the
word heru to survive in another language. This Egyptian application of the
word to their Pharaohs survived almost without change in Greek and
Sanskrit and later in Latin and the later Indo-European languages.
In Liddell and Scott we find the listing immediately after Helios of Helio-
Serapis, which is 'an Egyptian divinity'. I leave the reader to draw his own
conclusions regarding this clear use of the word Helio to preface a
description of Serapis. Serapis was the Greek form of Asar-Hep, Hep being
what is known in Greek as Apis the Bull. Asar is, of course, Osiris. In
Egyptian it was quite common for there to be references to 'Horus-Osiris'
combining Heru and Asar. Here in Greek we find this, if we accept my
thesis of the derivation of Helio from helu or heru.
Back to our fleece. We find that the Greek word for a woollen fleece is
related to the Egyptian word for Horus, the Greek word for sun, etc., etc.
So much for the puzzling nature of that now moot question: Why a fleece?
Back to sacred puns again, which besiege us endlessly.
Let us not forget the Sumerians. Let us look again at that list of the fifty
names of Marduk.
One way in which to make it sensible is to treat 'Lord of the Lands' (which
is given in English in Speiser and Heidel, unlike all the other names) as a
synonym of Nebiru. If we do this, then Ea is the fiftieth name and
everything is all right.
Now, let us look at the Egyptian language once again. We find that the
word Neb is extremely common and is used in many combinations and
means 'Lord'. Without further ado, let me make clear that I believe the
Sumerian Nebiru to be derived from the Egyptian Neb-Heru.
If we treat Heru in its older Egyptian sense as the sun, then the
descriptions of Nebiru in the Babylonian Enuma elish could read as a
perfect description of Neb-Heru - 'the Lord the sun':
'Nebiru shall hold the crossings of heaven and earth. ... He who the midst
of the Sea restlessly crosses,/Let "Crossing" be his name, who controls its
midst,' etc., though overlaid with this, as with the traditional Horus, is a
strictly stellar element which is behind the more obvious solar element.
However, I do not wish unduly to confuse the issue by peeling off too
many layers at once. Suffice it to recall the previously mentioned
associations of Horus with the Sirius system and note that there is a Heru-
ami-Sept-t 'Horus of Sothis' and Heru-Sept, 'Horus the Dog Star' and then
to note, again in association with Nebiru which is supposed to have been
Jupiter! that there is in Egyptian a Heru-sba-res 'Horus, star of the south,
i.e. Jupiter', and Heruup-Shet, 'the planet Jupiter'; also in the Enuma elish
Nebiru is clearly described as 'a star'.
We are getting deeper and deeper into the legend of the golden fleece, of
origins of Greek and Middle Eastern ideas in Egypt, along with key words
and names, etc. All these centre round the curious Sirius complex. What
more will we uncover ? Perhaps we need a break from all these Egyptian
words.
There are many other aspects of our subject, and it leads us ever closer to
the solution of our mystery - which is the origin of the subject.
SUMMARY
The Sumerian Bau, as a daughter of An, is a sister of the fifty great gods
(Anunnaki) who are also children of An. Since Bau may be a goddess of
the Dog Star Sirius, the fact that she is the sister of 'the fifty' is significant,
as Sirius B has an orbital period of fifty years.
The golden fleece was situated at Colchis in the Black Sea, where Jason
and his Argonauts went to seek it. Colchis was an ancient Egyptian colony
before 1200 B.C.
Prominent in the story of the Argo is the female character Circe (whose
name means 'falcon' or 'hawk'). Horus, son of Isis and Osiris, was
symbolized by a falcon or hawk. Circe presided over the Colchian
cemetery (which was originally Egyptian, Colchis having been an Egyptian
colony). Horus, who presided over the cemetery of Memphis in Egypt,
would have presided also over the one at Colchis while Egyptian influence
was still directly exercised. Circe is obviously a Greek derivation of Horus.
The word kirke (Circe) in Greek, which we customarily write 'Circe' due to
our habit of changing Greek k's into Latin c's, specifically means 'a kind of
hawk or falcon' or 'an unknown bird' - just the sort of confusion we should
expect among the Greeks with regard to a concept derived from Egyptian
culture and imperfectly understood.
The sacred king, such as Actaeon represented, had a 'sacred reign' of fifty
months. It is arguable that 'fifty months' is a shorthand version of 'fifty
years', but we now see undeniable ancient traditions connecting Sirius
with fifty intervals of time (whether months or years) comprising 'a reign'.
And of course the orbital period of Sirius B is fifty years comprising 'an
orbit', which in mythological parlance could quite easily be considered 'a
reign'.
For by doubling up in this way, using the nearest two whole numbers in
alternation, the exact correspondence was obtained, for 49 plus 50 gives
the same as 49.5 plus 49.5. Robert Graves has offered the only previous
theory to explain the 'fifty months' in ancient Greece, but his lunar theory
does not explain the alternation between 49 and 50, or other mysterious
aspects. It is probable that the true explanation based on the Sirius
mystery was later overlaid by a lunar tradition which was offered as an
'explanation' to non-initiates, despite its obvious flaws.
It was customary in ancient times also to group together two sacred reigns
of fifty months each to form a 'Great Year' of one hundred months. (In
practice, as with the Olympic Games, 99 months were actually used, but in
theory one used the round figure of 100 months conceived of as 'two
reigns'.) The name of the Greek goddess Hekate (Hecate) literally means
'one hundred'. She was involved with the Argo tale and specifically
identified by Robert Graves with Isis, and in other ways linked to Sirius as
an 'underworld version'.
This is thus yet another dog-motif connected with fifty (Sirius being the
Dog Star), and linked to Sirius in various ways, such as through the
goddess Hekate as an underworld version of Sirius. (The fifty Sumerian
Anunnaki also had their counterparts in the underworld. Fifty in the
underworld as 'death-counterparts' or shadows to fifty in heaven makes
one hundred - the very meaning of Hekate.)
The only known cure for gout (a serious ancient Egyptian complaint) is a
substance taken from the plant colchicum, named after Colchis where it
grew. This may explain a colony at Colchis. Colchicum is also called
'meadow saffron' and resembles true saffron (which also grows along the
Black Sea coasts), which gives a golden dye, perhaps explaining the
'golden' fleece. A golden fleece is a solar symbol.
Horus was a solar god. The letters 'L' and 'R' are interchangeable phonetic
liquids. The Egyptian form of Horus, Hern, can become Helu and give us
the Greek solar god's name Helios. Helios was supposed to stable his
horses at Colchis.
The Greek word for 'woollen fleece' is erion, a word similar to Heru with a
dropped aspirate ('h').
The Oracle Centers
What place could be more out of the way than Dodona in Greece ? It was
geographically outside the sphere of the civilized world of the Greeks -
somewhat more north and more west than any Greek could call
comfortable. Why was such an important and senior place of worship in
the wilds? Indeed, for that matter, why did Noah's ark land on a mountain
nobody ever visits and which is far more remote than even Dodona?
The ark and Argo and their connections with the Sirius mystery will now be
seen to have an intimate connection with the entire geographical structure
of the practice of religion in the ancient Mediterranean world.
Now we are about to consider a most difficult and complex web of ancient
practice which it seems to be possible for us to decipher. Let us approach
it in a simpler way than that by which I was originally led to it. Let us look
at the ship Argo as if it were spread over the surface of the globe by
projection. This may seem a curious idea, but the reader must bear with
me. After all, the boat is celestial, so why not a projection on the earth's
surface from above?
Most prominent in the constellation is the star Canopus which was called
'the Rudder', pedalion, by Aratos, Eudoxus, and Hipparchos (the leading
Greek astronomical figures before Ptolemy), as we are informed by Allen.1
There was a place named Canopus on the northern coast of Egypt, which
was quite a famous city to the Greeks, and Allen describes it thus:
'Ancient Canopus is now in ruins, but its site is occupied by the village of
Al Bekur, or Aboukir, famous from Lord Nelson's Battle of the Nile, 1
August 1798, and from Napoleon's victory over the Turks a year
afterwards; and it is interesting to remember that it was here, from the
terraced walls of the Serapeum, the temple of Serapis, that Ptolemy made
his observations.'
Note in the above story of the pilot Canopus that the names of the city
and the star are specifically said to have the same origin and that it is
from a famous pilot of a fleet, the man at the helm who steers the rudder
in the lead ship. Once again, in another way, the star (and the place) are
identified with the rudder, which was the other name for the same star.
Allen brings forward another interesting aspect of the star's name, which
will be something familiar to us:
The foregoing derivation of the word Canopus is an early and popular one;
but another, perhaps as old, and more probable, being on the authority of
Aristides, is from the Coptic, or Egyptian, Kahi Nub, Golden Earth. Ideler,
coinciding in this, claimed these words as also the source of other titles for
Canopus, the Arabic Wazn, Weight, and Hadar, Ground; and of the
occasional later Ponderosus and Terrestris. Although I find no reason
assigned for the appropriateness of these names, it is easy to infer that
they may come from the magnitude of the star and its nearness to the
horizon; this last certainly made it the [Perigeios - 'near the earth'] of
Eratosthenes.
Notice how the irrepressible Al Wazn, 'Weight', and its Latin form
Ponderosus, keep springing up whenever there seems to be a connection
with Sirius.
Allen mentions that 'The Hindus called (Canopus) Agastya, one of their
Rishis, or inspired sages, and helmsman of their Argha . . .' which is in
striking agreement with the Mediterranean concepts.
Here again we have our amphibious creature Oannes, identified now with
the god Enki, who in Sumerian myth did indeed reside at the bottom of the
Abzu, or Abyss, in fresh (not salt) water. It was, in fact, the god Enki who
assisted man before the flood came by warning the proto-Noah of the
Sumerian deluge story to build his ark. He thus fulfilled the function of the
special presiding deity of the Hebrews, the Jehovah of the Old Testament.
How many Jews know that their god was originally amphibious ?
This early Noah or proto-Noah, whom the god Enki warned, was called
either Ziusudra or Utnapishtim, depending on which period of pre-Biblical
literature one consults. In the early deluge stories, the proto-Noah in his
ark sends forth birds to seek dry land just as does Noah in his ark and
rather as Jason sends forth birds to find the way through the clashing
rocks.
But recall now the connections between Dodona and Mount Ararat implied
by a common tale of their having both been found by a 'Noah' in an ark
who sent forth a bird who found the mountain. It is true that one tale is
purely Greek and the other tale purely Hebrew. Naturally, there cannot be
any real connection between Dodona and Mount Ararat. After all, they are
probably purely arbitrary locations. It is all myth and fable, isn't it?
The Jews and the Greeks were never in contact. There could have been no
liaison between them. It is all separate hermetically sealed cultures with
vague fairy-tales and nonsense. Isn't it? Can anyone challenge such a
view? Of course not.
So it is interesting that Dodona and Mount Ararat are on the same parallel
and have the same latitude.
Furthermore, Mount Ararat has a centre associated with it which served
much the same function to the Caucasians as Dodona did to the Greeks. It
is called Metsamor. Here is a description of it by Professor David Lang and
Dr Charles Burney:3
Archaeological research during the past half century has materially altered
our concept of the history of literature, science, and learning in
Transcaucasia. A key site here is the village of Metsamor, a few miles to
the west of Echmiadzin, and within sight of Mount Ararat and Alagoz. Close
to the village is a massive rocky hummock, perhaps half a mile in
circumference, with outcrops of craggy stone. The hummock is riddled
with caves, underground storage vaults, and prehistoric dwellings, and is
now seen to have been a major scientific, astronomical and industrial
centre, operating in the fields of metallurgy, astrology and primitive magic
from a period hardly less than five thousand years ago.
Thus Georgia, with its neighbouring regions, was perhaps open as much to
influences from Europe as to those from the Near East. Transcaucasia may
have been not so much an original centre as a region into which metal-
working arrived from two different directions, and where, though present
in earlier periods in a modest way, it took root and from the late third
millennium B.C. began to develop along distinctive lines, no longer owing
its forms to external inspiration. . . .
Metsamor gives a hint that, just as earlier in Europe, once foreign
merchants had arrived seeking sources of metals, bringing their copper
and later their bronze products with them, and explaining, by choice or
otherwise, their techniques to the local population, it was no time before a
local industry began to arise. If present evidence indeed points to Armenia
as the oldest centre of metallurgy in Transcaucasia, it points also to a Near
Eastern inspiration.
'And, as the constellation (of Argo) was associated on the Nile with the
great god Osiris, so its great star became the Star of Osiris....'
Now to return to our projection of the Argo on the earth's surface. We put
the stern of the ship and its rudder at the obvious place - Canopus. (But
really slightly altered eastwards to the original city Behdet.)
Now we must consider Dodona. We are told that oak from Dodona was
placed 'in the middle of the keel' of Argo by Athena. It obviously ran the
whole length of the ship.
Mythology insisted that (the Argo) was built by Glaucus, or by Argos, for
Jason, leader of the fifty Argonauts, whose number equalled that of the
oars of the ship, aided by Pallas Athene, who herself set in the prow a
piece from the speaking oak of Dodona; the Argo being 'thus endowed
with the power of warning and guiding the chieftains who form its crew'.
She carried the famous expedition from Iolchis in Thessaly to Aea in
Colchis, in search of the golden fleece, and when the voyage was over
Athene placed the boat in the sky.
In measuring with the Argots projection one does so from the site of
Behdet, which is a bit east of Canopus on the northern Mediterranean
coast of Egypt, but it was common classical Greek practice to think of
Canopus in place of the forgotten Behdet, as for instance with 'the Canopic
Hercules' who went to Delphi and is mentioned by Pausanius as
predecessor to the Greek Hercules from Tiryns who was of much later
date. (It is important that the original Hercules was admitted by the
Greeks to have been an Egyptian.)
In fact, the Delphic oracle itself compares the Greek Hercules most
unfavourably with the original Egyptian one - and remember it is said that
in the earliest versions of the story it was Hercules, not Jason, who led the
Argonauts. Also, it is well accepted today among scholars that Hercules
was in many ways a survival of Gilgamesh, with particular motifs and
deeds being identical in both heroes.
Well, if we project the Argo on the earth with its rudder at Canopus (really
Behdet) we put the other end at Dodona because the oak in the prow
came from there. Canopus-Behdet is named after the rudder, and Dodona
produced the prow. Therefore we are not merely fantasizing when we
project the image of the Argo in such a way that the rudder is at the
rudder on earth and the prow is at the earthly source of the prow.
If we then keep the rudder at the same spot and swing the boat over a
map so that the prow which touched Dodona points towards Metsamor, we
discover that the angle made is exactly a right-angle of 900.
Now we get into geodetics, a fearsome subject. The fact is that geodetics
involves a bit of bother. It concerns latitudes and longitudes, and most
people would run a mile upon hearing those mentioned (sailors and pilots
of aircraft excepted). In fact no one is more likely to flee with terror from
the subject than an archaeologist.
I have arrived at this sequence for a geodetic oracle octave (see Fig. 25
below):
8. Dodona
7. Delphi (with its famous omphalos, a stone navel)
6. Delos, the famous shrine of Apollo, once an oracle centre (also with an
omphalos)
5. Kythera (Cythera), a site on the north-east coast (see later); or Thera
4. Omphalos (Thenae) near Knossos on Crete (on the Plain of Omphaleion)
3. Undiscovered site on Southern or South-western coast of Cyprus?
(Paphos?) (Cape Gata?)
2. Lake Triton (or Tritonis) in Libya
1. El Marj (Barce or Barca)
The ones which I have identified are spaced apart by one degree of
latitude which we shall see was the geodetic centre of the ancient world
(akin to Greenwich in the modern world) and was also a pre-dynastic
capital of Egypt.
What justification have I for speaking of a link between the oracle centers
and the musical octave? I have several reasons, and it would be just as
well for me to give some slight indications here to make the reader who is
justifiably puzzled at this point a little less so.
Note also the reference to Horus, whose falcon would have presided over
the Colchian dead in their hope of resurrection. In fact, one meaning of
kirkos (Circe - 'falcon'), which I did not elaborate on earlier, is 'ring'. I wish
to comment in passing that not only was the ring traditionally a solar
symbol (as was the golden fleece, and as was the falcon), but the
Cyclopes who were one-eyed were really one-ring-eyed.
Cyclopes means 'ring-eyed', in fact. Graves says:10
It is not only Deukalion's ark that is connected with Delphi. There are
connections also with the Argo, as we learn from Godfrey Higgins:11
'In the religious ceremonies at Delphi a boat of immense size was carried
about in processions; it was shaped like a lunar crescent, pointed alike at
each end: it was called an Omphalos or Umbilicus, or the ship Argo. Of this
ship Argo I shall have very much to say hereafter. My reader will please to
recollect that the os minxae or (Delphys) is called by the name of the ship
Argo.'
Other matters which Higgins connects with Delphi are the sacred syllable
om of the Indo-Europeans which he says,
'is not far from the divina vox of the Greek. Hesychius, also Suidas in voce,
interprets the word omph to be Oela (theia chledon), the sacred voice, the
holy sound - and hence arose the (omphalos), or place of Omphe.'
He relates all this with sacred music and the traditional sacred name of
God which consists of the seven vowels spoken in sequence to form one
word, which is the 'not-to-be-spoken word1.
He says:
'As a pious Jew will not utter the word Ieue, so a pious Hindu will not utter
the word Om.'
Higgins says 'on phe', is the verb root in Greek of phao 'to speak or
pronounce and phemi, 'to say'. (I might add that , phegos, is the word for
oak, as at Dodona, and phemi, literally means 'oracle'.) Hence Omphe
means 'the speaking of Om.' (At the pheme Dodona the phegos literally
practised omphe because the oak spoke there.)
Delphi was said to be the omphalos, 'navel', of the world. But it was in fact
only one of many.12 The reader will have noticed that there is an
Omphalos near Knossos in Crete which is one of the octave sequence of
oracle centers laid out in geodetic integral degrees of latitude from
Behdet, pre-dynastic capital of Egypt. A photograph of the omphalos stone
of Delos may be seen in Plate 12 as well.
The seven vowels, the seven strings of Apollo's lyre, the seven notes of
the octave (the eighth being a repetition one octave higher of the first as
most people will know), the eight oracle centers in the 'northern octave' of
oracles, the seven degrees of latitude marking the official length of
ancient Egypt itself, the mystic and unspeakable name of God consisting
of the seven vowels run together in one breath - all these are part of a
coherent complex of elements forming a system.
A stone cup, with the name of a Fifth Dynasty [the chronology of Richard
A. Parker gives the dates 2501-2342 B.C. for the Fifth Dynasty] solar
temple [of Pharaoh Userkaf at Abusir] (sp-rc) inscribed in Egyptian
hieroglyphs, has been found on Cythera. Early in the second quarter of the
second millennium, a Bablyonian inscription of Naram-Sin, King of
Eshnunna, was dedicated on Cythera 'for the life' of that Mesopotamian
monarch.
[This is one of the reasons for believing that both texts were sent to
Cythera in antiquity. Modern deception is unlikely because the Naram-Sin
text was found on Cythera in 1849 before the decipherment of cuneiform.]
The interesting thing is that both of these texts found on Cythera are
religious in character. Herodotus (1:105) relates that the Phoenicians
erected a temple on Cythera to the goddess of the heavens. Finally in
classical times, Cythera was a great centre of the cult of Aphrodite. The
ancient temples were built in the vicinity of Palaiopolis around the middle
of the eastern shore. I visited the site in 1958 and found it extensive and
promising for excavation. . . . Egyptians, Babylonians and Phoenicians
came to worship the great goddess there.
[At that time the great goddess, Gaia, was also in charge of Delphi, before
the usurpation by Apollo.]
Ancient cultic installations, carved out of the living rock, can still be seen
on a high place at the north end, near the shore. A well, cleared some
years ago, had, at its bottom, ancient statuary . . . [there are] ancient
stone walls. . . . The whole area is covered with ceramics that show the
site was occupied in Middle Minoan III (c. 1700-1570), Late Minoan I—III (c.
1570-1100) [Note: 'Late Minoan III (c. 1400-1100) is the Mycenaean Age']
and subsequently in classical times (5th-4th centuries B.C.).
The problem posed by ancient Cythera has not yet been answered. The
island is rather remote from Egypt and Asia for men to have sailed there,
for religious purposes alone. And yet it is hard to discover any more
practical reason. Cythera is not remarkable for its natural resources. . . .
Meanwhile we must reckon with Cythera as a site where all the evidence
so far points to its importance as a religious centre with international
attraction. . . . Such shrines have remained well known throughout the
ages. In classical antiquity, the oracle at Delphi was sought within a wide
radius. Today Lourdes attracts from every continent people in need of help
that they have not succeeded in finding nearer home.
Cythera thus became a centre for Egyptians and Semites and still other
people, from Abusir along the Nile to Eshnunna beyond the Euphrates.
Such visitors brought their influence to bear upon the Aegean, and on
returning home, carried some Aegean culture with them. . . . It is
gratifying that Cythera is now being excavated by Professor George
Huxley for the University of Pennsylvania Museum.
' [it is] the most ancient, I am told, of all the temples of this goddess. The
one in Cyprus the Cyprians themselves admit was derived from it, and the
one in Cythera was built by the Phoenicians, who belong to this part of
Syria.'
In the latter (unquoted) part of his last footnote given above, Gordon
mentions that 'Phoenicians' is Herodotean language inclusive of the
Minoans.
Now as for the site of Delos, I will give information here from H. W. Parke's
authoritative book Greek Oracles14 which will indicate its importance as
an oracle centre in my postulated 'northern octave' of geodetic centers:
The other point which Dodona could urge against Delphi in its favour was
that it was the oracle of Zeus himself. Apollo was at most the son of Zeus,
inserted somewhat awkwardly into the Greek pantheon. On the face of it
his prophecies could not be as significant as the utterances of the father of
gods and men.
'May the harp and the bending bow be my delight, and I shall prophesy to
men the unerring will of Zeus.'
In the rest of the same poem there are other references to Delos as an
oracle-centre, a function which had lapsed in the classical period. But this
part of the Homeric Hymn with its description of the Delian festival
evidently dates back to an early stage of the archaic period - probably
about 700 B.C.
The concept of Apollo as the prophet of Zeus may, then, have started in
Delos, but it was certainly taken over and largely developed by Delphi.
At Delphi, namely the site of the classical shrine of Athena Pronaia on the
east of Castalia ... as excavation has shown, there was not a settlement,
but a cult centre going back to Mycenaean times. ... It is interesting
archaeologically that a number of important finds from the earlier archaic
periods show clear affinities or actual derivation from Crete.
'Phoebus Apollo then took it in mind whom he would bring of men as his
worshippers who would serve him in rocky Pytho. Then while pondering he
was aware of a swift ship on the wine-dark sea, and in it were good men
and many - Cretans from Minoan Knossos who offer sacrifices to the lord
Apollo and announce the oracles of Phoebus Apollo of the golden sword
whatever he speaks in prophecy from the laurel-tree ...'
Some scholars have seen in the evident archaeological links between early
archaic Delphi and Crete a basis of fact behind this facade of legend, and
it is possible that the cult of Apollo was introduced by sea from Crete. . . .
In the Homeric Hymn quoted we find it specifically stated that Minoan
Cretans (contemporaneous with ancient Egypt, of course, and who traded
with the Egyptians) from Knossos took Apollo to Delphi, the site of an
omphalos. And these Knossians are stated to respect oracles. And near
Knossos is a site called Omphalos which is one degree of latitude south of
the site of Kythera, which is one degree south of Delos, which is one
degree south of Delphi.
'In the Cyclades Delos had once had an Apolline oracle of importance. . . .
One can suppose that this institution existed ... at the end of the eighth
century, and may have dwindled away in the seventh century. ... By the
time when Pisistratus and Polycrates in the latter half of the sixth century
revived the sanctity of Delos, the oracle appears to have already ceased
and was not restored.'18
It is a daunting prospect to try to set forth at proper length all the complex
tangle of information concerning the 'northern octave' and its many links
with the Sirius tradition. It is impossible for me to do justice in this book to
the subject of the astronomical knowledge of the ancients.19
From Hamlet's Mill we have a passage which is now relevant. The reader
will have to accept on trust that the seven notes of the octave and the
seven planets of ancient times were thought of in connection with one
another. We cannot here take on the debate concerning early
Pythagoreanism versus Neo- Pythagoreanism and the genesis of different
concepts of 'harmony of the spheres'.
And I believe both that this was probably the case and that Uranus was
sometimes compared to Sirius B because they were both 'invisible'. Also,
Sirius B orbits Sirius A as a planet orbits a sun, as I have mentioned
before, for its orbital period is less than that of our own planets Uranus,
Neptune, and Pluto. The fact that Sirius B, a star, moves faster than
Uranus, a planet, is an additional reason for the two to be thought of as
similar. Sirius B was additionally compared in some obscure way to the
innermost tiny planet Mercury, the nature of whose orbit was symbolized
by the human intestines - see Figure 13 for this - and Uranus was the
'octave' expression of Mercury.
And it was the oak of Dodona which was fitted into the prow of the Argo
which returned the golden fleece. During the interval of the fleece's stay
in Colchis the fleece rested 'in the grove of Ares (Mars)'. The important
points to note are that the fleece went to Colchis under the auspices of the
first planet, rested there under the auspices of (the planet?) Mars, and
returned under the auspices of Sirius the 'eighth planet' with the oak of
the eighth oracle centre in the Argo's prow.
And we have already seen how Argo, if swung through a 900 angle,
touches its prow first at Dodona and then points directly at Metsamor near
Mount Ararat. But if an extended Argo has its prow touch Dodona and its
rudder at Egyptian Thebes, the Argo may be swung to Ararat/Metsamor
and touches its prow there too.
Parke says: 'On Asia Minor Didyma near Miletus is the only oracle-centre
for whose activity we have some evidence in the sixth century.'22 Miletus
seems to be on the same parallel as Delos, just as Sardis is on the same
parallel as Delphi.23 And we have seen that Mount Ararat (having its
associated centre at Metsamor) is on the same parallel as Dodona. There
may be a 'northeastern octave' to correspond to the 'northern octave'.
But we shall see later that geodetic points exist over great stretches of
territory, marked out from Behdet, the ancient Greenwich.
(For instance, an arc swung through Aea in Colchis would pass through
Mecca as well, if the compass point were on Behdet. A line from Egyptian
Thebes to Dodona intersects the vicinity of Omphalos and Knossos on
Crete. The lines connecting Thebes, Dodona, and Metsamor, form an
equilateral triangle. A line from Behdet to Dodona intersects Thera. Also, a
straight line passes through the three points Behdet, Mecca, Dodona. As
for Mecca, I doubt that many Moslem scholars will be at all surprised to
learn of these aspects of their holy centre. They know very well that the
centre has geodetic aspects and the central shrine of the Kaaba dates
from prehistoric times; they say it was established by the prophet
Abraham.)
Associations of Delphi with the Sirius tradition are not limited to the
Canopic Egyptian Hercules's visit, the carrying of an Argo in procession,
and the desire to claim the ark of Deukalion instead of Dodona's claiming
it (the centers then being rivals for power and attention, as I have said).
Now, as to the omphalos stone and also Behdet. For these subjects we
must turn to an amazing book published in 1971 The Secrets of the Great
Pyramid by Peter Tompkins (with a scholarly appendix by Livio Stecchini).
Tompkins tells us:24
The prime meridian of Egypt was made to split the country longitudinally
precisely in half, running from Behdet on the Mediterranean, right through
an island in the Nile just northeast of the Great Pyramid, all the way to
where it crossed the Nile again at the Second Cataract. . . . Cities and
temples, says Stecchini, were deliberately built at distances in round
figures and simple fractions from the tropic or the prime meridian.
The predynastic capital of Egypt was set near the mouth of the Nile at
Behdet, right on the prime meridian, at 31 deg. 30'. . . . Memphis, the first
capital of united Egypt, was again laid out on the prime meridian and at
29deg. 51', precisely 6 deg. north of the tropic. ... As each of these
geodetic centers was a political as well as a geographical 'navel' of the
world, an omphalos, or stone navel, was placed there to represent the
northern hemisphere from equator to pole, marked out with meridians and
parallels, showing the direction and distance of other such navels.
In Thebes the stone omphalos was placed in the main room of the temple
of Amon, where the meridian and parallel actually cross. . . . For the
ancient Egyptians to have laid out an absolutely straight meridian of 300
of latitude from the Mediterranean to the equator, over 2,000 miles, and
drawn two more, equidistant, east and west, as boundaries of the country
[see illustrations in the book], must have required an enormous amount of
personnel and careful astronomical sightings.
Other countries located their shrines and capital cities in terms of the
Egyptian meridian 'zero', including such capitals as Nimrod, Sardis, Susa,
Persepolis, and, apparently, even the ancient Chinese capital of An-Yang.
All of these localities, says Stecchini, were set and oriented on the basis of
the most exact sightings. The same applies to the centers of worship of
the Jews, the Greeks, and the Arabs.
The two great oracular centers of Greece - Delphi and Dodona - were also
geodetic markers according to Stecchini. Delphi is 7 deg. and Dodona 8
deg. north of Behdet, the northernmost part of Egypt, on the prime
meridian of Egypt.
This is obviously where I got the original idea for my 'northern octave',
from this brilliant observation of Stecchini's.
In Plate 12 the reader may see for himself the surviving omphalos stones
of Delphi and of Delos86 - both of which are spread with 'nets'
representing a latitudinal and longitudinal geodetic mesh.26 It is this mesh
which is probably carried at all times by Oannes (see Plates 6, 7, 8 and 9)
as a 'basket'.
For the 'warp and woof of the sacred basket of Oannes/Dagon - surviving
as the lyknos basket of Greek Demeter (who succeeded the Philistine fish-
tailed Dagon as agricultural deity, keeping Dagon's 'basket') - represent
perfectly the warp and woof of latitude and longitude. The Dogon have
traditions of the religious and mythological importance of 'warp and woof
in weaving, and of sacred baskets 'which are not baskets', all of which
may be found described in many places in Le Renard Pale.
In Plate 12 the reader may see the omphalos stone found by Reisner in the
great temple of Amon at Thebes in Egypt. This stone was placed in the
main room of the temple where the meridian and parallel actually cross.2'
In Figure 23 is a reproduction of a figure from an Egyptian papyrus of
omphalos stones
with two doves perched on top. These two doves are the standard glyph
meaning 'to lay out parallels and meridians'.28 They are the 'two doves'
who flew to Dodona from Thebes according to the account of Herodotus.2'
Of course, the two doves are in fact carrier-pigeons. To keep in touch over
such enormous distances, and to maintain prompt communication
between oracle-centers which was essential to the successful operation of
a coherent 'world-wide' religious network spread over thousand of miles,
the only available means were carrier-pigeons.
Since Mount Tomaros at Dodona and Mount Ararat are both 'landing sites'
for an ark, this must mean that the tip of the prow of the ark literally does
touch either of them when projected on the globe from Thebes. This may
be seen clearly drawn by a cartographer in Figure 19.
The site of Siwa may have been chosen simply to display this. In both
instances we have the helm of the Argo as the starting point: in the
celestial pattern we start from the star Canopus, identified with the Argo's
helm; and in the geodetic pattern we start with Thebes, which is the site
for the global Argo's helm when projected either to Dodona or Ararat. But
there is another means of projecting the Argo, using Behdet, to convey
other meanings
-bearing in mind always the interconnecting relationships of the sites, with
Behdet equidistant from both Siwa and Thebes, and also on the
northernmost point of Egypt and (see Figure 16 below) on the prime
meridian dividing Egypt as demonstrated by Livio Stecchini.32
When the helm of the Argo is placed at Behdet (near the geographical
Canopus) rather than at Thebes, with the prow touching Mount Ararat, if
we swing the prow across to Dodona through an arc of exactly 900 (a right
angle), we find that the prow is then too long and must be shortened. In
fact, for this extraordinary point, documentary evidence actually exists in
a Babylonian text.
In Chapter Three we cited the passage in another context, and I will here
return to it. It is from the brief Sumerian epic poem 'Gilgamesh and Agga',
of extreme antiquity, the surviving tablets preserving it dating from the
first half of the second millennium b.c. This Sumerian poem contains,
within the framework of what seems to be a local political diatribe, a
certain bizarre core of material which no scholar has ever satisfactorily
interpreted.83
Figure 21.
(1) 'The prow of the magurru-boat. was not cut down' (line 80)
(2) 'The prow of the magurru-boat was cut down.' (line 98) In Chapter
Three I discussed why the magurru-boat and the magan-boat of another
poem were in fact that boat which was later known as the Argo.
I believe that statement (1) refers to the Argo as projected from Behdet to
Ararat, and that statement (2) refers to the projection of the Argo from
Behdet to Dodona. The latter requires the cutting down or shortening of
the prow lest the Argo extend beyond Dodona.
As long as the prow was not cut down in 'Gilgamesh and Agga', we find
that 'The multitude did not cover itself with dust' in mourning. For the
projection was still extended over the north-west of Mesopotamia, the
Sumerian homeland being at least in the general vicinity.
Figure 22.
The poem says also, as long as the prow is not cut down, that 'The people
of all the foreign lands were not overwhelmed'. In other words, the
projection did not fall over foreigners such as those living in Greece. It did
not literally 'overwhelm' people of foreign lands, meaning overshadow or
pass over them.
However, when the prow was shortened, the projection of Argo left
Mesopotamia altogether, and then 'The multitude covered itself with dust'
and the people of foreign lands were overwhelmed. It is at this point that
Gilgamesh says to Agga, 'O Agga, the fleeing bird thou hast filled with
grain' (in other words, fed the carrier-pigeon in preparation for his flight to
another and different oracle centre - namely, Dodona rather than
Metsamor).
The entire poem is based round a repeated refrain which Kramer calls 'a
riddle',36 and which concerns the digging and completing of wells, of 'the
small bowls of the land', and wishes 'to complete the fastening ropes'. At
this point only a Sumerian scholar can tell us whether there are any other
shades of meaning or alternative readings which might make the passage
clearer, following the clue that 'the fastening ropes' may refer to the rope-
like mesh which we see, for instance, on the omphali of Delphi and Delos.
Can 'the small bowls of the land' be either geodetic points or their
markers, the omphalos stones themselves, which are like small bowls ?
Could 'small bowls' be an accepted expression for omphali in Sumerian
parlance ? Answers to these questions are entirely beyond the
competence of any but a dozen or so scholars. Even experts in the
Akkadian language cannot help us here, with non-Semitic Sumerian. And
even answers from one of the experts might be wrong through human
error.
Stecchini says:37
He then makes some extremely critical remarks about Cyril Aldred and
others and continues:
The miles-long remains of the buildings of this city have heen found and
excavated in the locality known today as Tell el-Amarna. During the reign
of Akhenaten a substantial percentage of the national resources was
dedicated to the construction of this city.
Scholars of the last century, who had not yet adopted the psychologizing
fashion, at least recognized the political meaning of the shift in the
location of the capital of Egypt. Akhenaten intended to cut at the root of
the power of the priests of the Temple of Amon in Thebes, who through
their control of the national oracle, identified with the god of this temple,
had usurped the royal functions.
But what these scholars did not know is that the Temple of Amon was the
geodetic centre of Egypt, the 'navel' of Egypt, being located where the
eastern axis (32 deg. 38' east) crosses the Nile, at the parallel which is at
2/7 of the distance from the equator to the pole (25 deg. 42' 51" north),
and that the god Amon was identified with the hemispheric stone which
marked this point.
The new city which was intended to replace Thebes as the capital and
geodetic centre of Egypt was planted in a position which seems
undesirable in terms of what we would consider the function of a capital
city. Some scholars have interpreted this fact as further evidence of the
mental derangement of its founder. . . .
The new capital for the god Aten, who was raised to the status of the one
true god, was set at latitude 27 deg. 45' north, at the middle point
between the northernmost point Behdet and the southern limit of Egypt at
latitude 24 deg. 00' north. . . . Akhenaten wanted to prove that Thebes
could not properly claim to be the geodetic centre of Egypt and that he
had chosen the geodetic centre conforming to an absolutely rigorous
interpretation of maet, the cosmic order of which the dimensions of Egypt
were an embodiment.
This conclusion implies that one should re-evaluate the entire historical
role of Akhenaten, taking as the starting-point what he himself considered
the initial step in his program to establish true and just conformity with
maet. There is a possibility that his revolutionary reforms, which extended
from religion to art and family relations, were understood as a general
return to pre-dynastic ideas and practices.
Note the fact that Thebes had established itself as the 'navel' of Egypt but
not on the basis of the 'Behdet system' which Akhenaten apparently tried
to revive. It shows how ancient the 'northern octave' must be if it was
based on the 'Behdet system' whereas Thebes was not. The clear
involvement of Thebes in the 'northern octave' system is not exclusive but
is complementary to that of Behdet.
At Dodona . . . the priestesses who deliver the oracles have a ... story: two
black doves, they say, flew away from Thebes in Egypt, and one of them
alighted at Dodona, the other in Libya. The former, perched on an oak,
and speaking with a human voice, told them that there, on that very spot,
there should be an oracle of Zeus.
Stecchini also explains his theory that the oracles originally functioned
through the operations of computing devices:
Very revealing is that a base line was marked along parallel 45 deg. 12'
north on the north side of the Black Sea. This base line started from the
mouth of the Danube, cut across the Crimea, and ended at the foot of the
Caucasus. Beginning from this base, Russia was surveyed for a length of
10 degrees, along with the three meridians which formed the three axes
of Egypt, up to latitude 550 12' north.
2.
Plate 11:
'The six spikes on Sirius A are caused by the hexagon used on the front of
the telescope. The point of making the photo in this way is that Sirius A is
about 100 times as bright as Sirius B so that its light tends to spread out
over Sirius B rendering it invisible. By using a hexagonal lens (actually a
26-inch circular lens with a hexagonal mask) in his telescope, Lindenblad
was able to compress the star image in certain directions; he chose the
orientation of the hexagon so that Sirius B's image fell in one of the
compressed zones and was thus able to be seen . . .
The wire grating referred to by Lindenblad makes the small images of
Sirius A on either side of the bright one (there are small images of B too,
but they are too small to be visible). The point of this is that the bright
image of Sirius A (the "zero order" image) is so big that Lindenblad
couldn't measure the position of Sirius B with respect to A. He made first
and second order images, measured B with respect to them and was able
to calculate where B was with respect to the zero order image of A.'
The reader can by this point appreciate how clever Lindenblad had to be in
order to achieve any results at all. However, these were not all of his
problems. There was a serious emulsion contraction effect for the
photograph, with such close images.
All the more reason to wonder at the Dogon, who, oblivious of our
scientific labours, have always drawn pictures of Sirius in the sand, with its
companion - nothing to it!
Plate 12:
Top left: The beautiful omphalos stone found at Delphi in Greece, covered
in the mesh thought to symbolize the latitudinal and longitudinal grid on
the Earth. (For an exhaustive treatment of that theory, see Secrets of the
Great Pyramid by Tompkins and Stecchini, particularly Appendix by
Stecchini.)
Middle left: Relief discovered at Miletus in Asia Minor. The figure of Apollo
is resting on an omphalos stone (and an actual omphalos stone has also
been discovered at Miletus) covered in mesh, while a second, smaller
omphalos stone with a serpent is seen in foreground. The palm is
prominent here again. Miletus is on the same parallel as Delos, and the
palm is the 'tree-code' for that latitude in the oracle octaves schema.
Delos is the western centre and Miletus is the eastern centre at 37°30'.
The nearby site of Branchidae (also known as Didyma) to the south seems
to have adopted the oracular functions presumably associated with
Miletus itself originally. This relief appears as Figure 101 (the last in the
volume), page 411, of Das Delphinion in Milet by Georg Kawerau and
Albert Rehm, Berlin, 1914. Roscher also reproduced it.
'We have already noted here in later periods the distinctive likeness of
Pythian Apollo which is universally known, and there is nothing
extraordinary in finding this cult image of the Delphinion, the omphalos-
andserpent. . . .'
Middle right: Two Babylonian altars to the god Anu which bear what
appear to be omphali.
'On the 21st of April, 1917, I received a letter from Professor Gunther
Roeder, now Director of the Pelizaeus Museum in Hildesheim saying that
Reisner (Harvard University) had, in excavations for the Boston Museum at
Gebel Barka (Napata) in the Sudan, found a stone in a temple of the
Nubian-Merotic kings which was the omphalos of the Amon-oracle of
Napata. . . .'
Plate 14:
Top left: Votive relief of fifth century b.c. from Sparta; Apollo and Artemis,
between them an omphalos flanked by two doves with their heads turned
away in the customary manner for these scenes. (From Plate VII, No. 4, of
W. H. Roscher, Omphalos, Leipzig, 1913.)
Centre top: Votive relief from Aigina, showing omphalos with two doves,
their heads turned away. (From Plate VIII, No. 3, of W. H. Roscher,
Omphalos, Leipzig, 1913.)
Top right coin: Coin from Delphi showing Apollo sitting on the omphalos
stone and leaning on his lyre. He holds a laurel branch, which is the 'tree-
code' for Delphi. Note the clear differentiation of trees in this compared
with the earlier Delos and Miletus examples of Plate 12; at Delphi the
laurel is appropriately shown, whereas Delos and Miletus display the palm.
This coin is from Imhoof-Blumer's A Numismatic Commentary on
Pausanius.
Two bottom right-hand coins: Two coins from Delphi showing the entrance
to the Temple of Apollo in ancient times.
The letter 'E' hangs suspended in the entrance way; It is the second vowel,
and Delphi is the second oracle centre in descending order (the ancient
octave was taken as descending rather than as ascending - the ignorance
of which fact has led many modern experts astray when trying to unravel
the complexities of Pythagorean harmonic theory).
These two coins may be found reproduced also in Imhoof-Blumer (above).
The second of these coins is to be found in the Copenhagen Museum,
while the first was in Dr Imhoof-Blumer's private collection in the last
century, and its fate today is unknown to this author.
Plate 15:
The author has not been able to learn the mythological incidents referred
to in this curious vase.
Plate 16:
The ram is in the crucible, its fleece presumably being transmuted into
gold in what we would call an alchemical sense. Was there such a thing as
alchemy at this time in history ? Alchemy is generally thought of as a
mediaeval discipline.
Plate 17:
Above: The goddess Artemis sets the hounds of hell upon Actaeon and
slays him. She holds the bow of Sirius the Bow Star. The hounds are the
hounds of Sirius the Dog Star. She is herself, in this guise, a Greek version
of Sirius the goddess. But the tradition has become confused and
fragmented by the Greeks, broken down into elements which are used to
construct other myths.
Below: The infant god Apollo, four days after his birth, shoots an arrow at
the serpent Python from his mother's arms. However, this scene is not
Delphi but Delos, for the palm trees are the 'tree-code' of Delos. This Attic
vase painting provides important confirmation that the story, which was
supposed to have occurred at Delphi, was also linked with Delos.
If Python was not only at Delphi but at Delos as well, then Python is a
concept rather than a creature. This is all further evidence for the geodetic
oracle-octave which includes both Delphi and Delos, which are one degree
of latitude apart.
Delos had ceased to have any function as an oracle centre by about 600
B.C., which helps one appreciate the antiquity of the system, since Delos
had no oracular functions at all by the time of classical Greece, when
Socrates was gadding about the agora in Athens.
Plate 18:
Below: This is one of the most interesting cylinder seals to survive from
the Babylonian culture. It is reproduced in Henri Frankfort, Cylinder Seals,
Plate XX; and in Sumerian Mythology, Plate XII, by Samuel Noah Kramer,
where Kramer says of it:
'. . . two gods are guiding a plow, which is perhaps drawn by a lion and a
wormlike dragon.'
'Two gods plowing; one holding a plow, the other driving span (consisting
of snakelike dragon and lion) with left hand, which either holds or is
shaped like a scorpion; bird, eight-pointed star, and crescent in field.'
If we assume this to be the case, the figure whose hand has become a
scorpion can be explained. Obviously, the constellation Scorpio is
intended, which is approximately a third of the sky 'round' from Sirius.
From the ancient Greek astronomical writer Aratus, we know that when
Scorpio rises, it chases Sirius and Orion away below the horizon.
Plate 19:
Cadmus seems to represent the constellation Orion, for beneath his feet
figures prominently a hare which appears to be meant as the constellation
Lepus.
The doves and the shrine with serpents arc both elements of the oracle
centers associated with the Sirius tradition in Greece.
Plate 20:
The great hawk of Horus which stands before the temple of Edfu in Egypt.
Similar statues would have stood at the Egyptian cemetery of Colchis and
given rise to the Greek traditions of Circe ('hawk') through the spread of
legends about the Argonauts and their search for the Golden Fleece at
Colchis, which Herodotus tells us was an Egyptian colony.
Plate 21:
The bust is in the Athens Museum, and may be found reproduced (though
unidentified) in Gerhart Rodenwaldt Griechische Portrats. Rodenwaldt also
reproduces photographs of front and side view of a bust later identified as
being that of the earlier neo-platonist philosopher Iamblichus.
It is also interesting to note, by way of relation with the ark of Noah, the
ark of Ziusudra (or Utnapishtim), the ark of Deukalion, and the Argo - all of
whom sent forth birds over the water (like those birds from Thebes as
well) that the standard Egyptian hieroglyph for the act of laying out of
parallels and meridians is, as we have seen, two pigeons facing each
other.
Stecchini says:
'In the religion of the Old Kingdom (of Egypt), Sokar is an important god of
orientation and of cemeteries. The god and the geodetic point were
represented by the stone object which the Greeks called omphalos,
'navel'; it is a hemisphere (the northern hemisphere) resting on a cylinder
(the foundations of the cosmos). Usually on top of Sokar, as on top of any
omphalos, there are portrayed two birds facing each other; in ancient
iconography these two birds, usually doves, are a standard symbol for the
stretching of meridians and parallels.'
Hence we see even further Egyptian connections with the Greek and Near
Eastern tales in which the birds are let fly and the ship finds the oracle
centre's mountain.
The willow was associated with the Colchian cemetery and with the island
of Aeaea of Circe, but particularly it is connected with the island of Crete
in tradition. But this subject will have to be tackled at some other time,
lest I blow this book up into a puffball of miscellaneous odds and ends.
We do know from Robert Graves that the oracle centre of Hebron - which
is on the same latitude as Behdet and seems to be its eastern counterpart,
was connected with the tree sant, or wild acacia,
'the sort with golden flowers and sharp thorns. ... It is ... the oracular
Burning Bush in which Jehovah appeared to Moses.'
Graves adds:
'The acacia is still a sacred tree in Arabia Deserta and anyone who even
breaks off a twig is expected to die within the year.'43
Its symbolism for the Sirius Mystery is an act of pure genius, and is
graphically elucidated by Theophrastus:44
'There are two kinds, the white and the black; the white is weak and easily
decays, the black is stronger and less liable to decay . . .'
A perfect symbol of the two stars, the 'black' Sirius B being 'strong' for its
size compared with the white Sirius A. Also of the willow (fourth centers),
Theophrastus tells us:45
'There is that which is called the black willow . . . and that which is called
the white . . . The black kind has boughs which are fairer and more
serviceable . . . There is a (dwarf) form . . .'
SUMMARY
The other Arabian star named 'Weight' was in the constellation Argo. But
we see the Argo was associated with Sirius, as well as was the first star
named 'Weight' which was in the Great Dog constellation and a visible
companion of Sirius.
If an Argo is projected on the globe with its rudder near the ancient
Egyptian city Canopus on the coast of the Mediterranean (the star
Canopus forms the rudder of the Argo in the sky) and with its prow at
Dodona (from where the oak came which was placed in the Argo's prow), if
we hold the stern firmly on Canopus but swing the ship eastwards at the
top, so that the prow points towards Mount Ararat, where Noah's ark was
supposed to have landed, we find that the arc thus described is a right-
angle of 900.
Instead of Canopus we must really use the neighboring site of the now
entirely vanished city of Behdet, which was the capital of pre-dynastic
Egypt prior to the foundation of Memphis.
All these sites were revealed as a pattern now termed a 'geodetic octave'
by the projection on the globe of the Argo, which is connected with Sirius.
Sirius was not only the element of the most sacred traditions of the Dogon
and the ancient Egyptians, but apparently of the entire civilized and
cosmopolitan Mediterranean world prior at least to 3000 b.c. and probably
well before 3200 b.c.
The 'Greek ark' was claimed to have landed at both Dodona and Delphi.
An 'ark' was carried in procession at Delphi.
This oasis centre and Thebes are both equidistant from Behdet.
Geodetic surveys of immense accuracy were thus practiced in ancient
Egypt with a knowledge of the Earth as a spherical body in space and
projections upon it envisaged as part of the institutions embodying Sirius
lore for posterity.
Notes
I refer the reader who suffers from a desperate urge to purge his
ignorance to that magnificent work by Sir Norman Lockyer, The Dawn of
Astronomy. His book should be required reading in all schools, even
though it becomes quite technical in places (which the nontechnical
reader is well advised to skim over quickly). This book was published in
1894 in London by Cassell, but at the instigation of Professor Santillana,
has been brought out again by M.I.T. Press in America in the 1960s (see
Note 2).
Tompkins, Peter. Secrets of the Great Pyramid, Harper and Row, New York,
London, 1971. Appendix by Livio Stecchini,
Livio Stecchini mentions a number of Greek accounts which associate
Delphi with Sardis, the capital of the kingdom of Lydia in Asia Minor, which
is on the same parallel (38 deg. 28' north)', p. 349 (Stecchini's Appendix)
in Tompkins, op. cit. I believe that the mountain associated with this
geodetic centre is Mount Sipylus, north-east of Smyrna (now Izmir). See
Pausanius III, xxii.4 and p. 13 of Garstang, John, The Syrian Goddess,
London, 1913. Mt. Sipylus boasts an extremely ancient gigantic carving
from the living rock of the Great Goddess whose main centre came to be
Hierapolis, another oracle centre in the series. The Great Goddess as Gaia
(to the Greeks) was the original patroness of Delphi before the usurpation
by Apollo. ('. . . the earth-goddess was the original female deity ... in Late
Mycenaean times . . . there may have been an oracle as part of the cult. . .
. the arrival of Apollo as a god of divination was originally a hostile
intrusion . . ,' p. 36, Parke, op. cit.) I believe that Malatia (Malatya), further
inland than Sardis on the same parallel, may be connected somehow with
Delphi and Sardis as well (obviously more with Sardis than Delphi). For
this, see Garstang, pp. 14-15.
But I am quite unable to believe that other story, that Herakles could
behave so arrogantly to the daughter of a friend. Besides, even when he
was on earth he used to punish arrogant outrages, particularly if they
were against religion: so? he would hardly have founded his own temple
and set it up with a priestess like a god.
But in fact this sanctuary seemed to me older than the days of Herakles
son of Amphitryon, and to belong to the Idaian Daktylos called Herakles,
whose sanctuaries I also discovered at Erythrai in Ionia and at Tyre.
Actually even the Boiotians knew the name, since they say themselves
that the sanctuary of Mykalessian Demeter has Idaian Herakles as patron.
It would now be worth while for us to see what Robert Graves has to say
about this tale. Graves calls Thestios by the name of Thespius and spends
some time pondering the meaning.2 He says it means 'divinely sounding',
but wishes he could find another meaning. I am inclined to be happy with
'divinely sounding' because of what I believe to be the heavy emphasis on
music, sound and harmony among the ancients.
The Greeks were reputed, for instance, to have considered music the
highest art; and the Pythagoreans made harmony and number into an
actual religion. We have already come across the use of the octave as a
relevant theme in our considerations and we have seen the possible
connection of omphalos and om - the latter being the Indo-Aryan sacred
syllable chanted for its 'divinely sounding' qualities and surviving in
Christianity and Islam as 'Amen'.
Since if we were to look for a Greek word to describe the sacred syllable
om we could choose the appropriate name meaning 'divinely sounding', it
seems that this meaning is by no means unsatisfactory. Graves tells us
the following:3
But the intention obviously was to highlight the sequence of fifty time
periods, personified as 'daughters' enjoyed by our ubiquitous Hercules
who is connected in so many ways with the Sirius complex.
Graves adds:4
'Thespius's fifty daughters - like the fifty Danaids, Pallantids, and Nereids,
or the fifty maidens with whom the Celtic god Bran (Phoroneus) lay in a
single night - must have been a college of priestesses serving the Moon-
goddess, to whom the lion-pelted sacred king had access once a year
during their erotic orgies around the stone phallus called Eros ('erotic
desire'). Their number corresponded with the lunations which fell between
one Olympic Festival and the next.'
The Olympic Games were, as they are now, held every four years, and the
Olympiads or four-year periods were understood to have commenced in
776 B.C., which is an extremely recent date compared with the extreme
antiquity of 'the fifty' in all its myriad occurrences.
For instance, there were no Olympiads in Homer's day when 'the tale of
the Argo was on everybody's lips', and the fifty Minyae were on their way
into literary immortality in what was to become the Western world. Much
more likely that a period of fifty lunations was modeled after a long-
established tradition - the esoteric fifty-year period. Thus the fifty- month
and fifty-day sequences were probably derived in emulation.
I assume that the cycle of fifty lunations which Graves mentions here is
identical to his fifty-month period of the reign of a sacred king, which is
supposed to be 'half of a Great Year of a hundred months'. Can it be that
fifty, as half of one hundred, is meant to represent by its reduplication the
two-to-one ratio as a means of signifying the concept of the musical
octave with its two- to-one ratio? *
And can this be why the Argo is supposed to be 'whole in the sky' (Aratos)
and yet the constellation also supposed to represent only the latter half of
a ship ? Can this apparent double-talk be yet another way of signifying the
two-tone ratio ?
These monsters resemble the monster Cerberus, the hound of Hades who
originally had fifty heads, but later became simplified and had only three
heads -presumably for the same reason that these monsters are three in
number, and also the reason that Hecate (whose pet Cerberus was, and
who was a form of Isis-Sirius and whose name literally means 'one
hundred') had three heads or forms, and that the boat of Sirius in ancient
Egypt had three goddesses together in it. In other words, probably the
same reason that the Dogon insist that there are three stars in the Sirius
system.
(Despite the fact that the astronomical evidence has recently gone against
the existence of a third star, the case is by no means closed. If there is a
third star, it does not produce the perturbation which had been claimed for
it before the seven years' observations recently concluded by astronomer
Irving Lindenblad.6)
We should note that Hippolyte means simply 'letting horses loose'. And it
was from Colchis that the horses of the sun were let loose every morning,
for it was there that they were stabled, according to Greek tradition. There
is also a really peculiar use of the word hippopede, which has the normal
mundane meaning of 'a horse fetter', in a cosmic sense.
It appears from Liddell and Scott that this word was used by the
astronomer Eudoxus (the one who went to Egypt and who was mentioned
earlier) as the word for the curve described by a planet. We know this
from Simplicius on Aristotle's De Caelo and Proclus on Euclid.* Two
sources are better than one.
There is probably more to this than we can ever discover, for the
necessary texts are lost.
If we examine the name Gyges, who was one of the other three monsters
which included Briareus, we find its meaning has the same origins as
gygantelos, which in English became 'gigantic', but the meaning of this
word was not by any means simply 'giant'. Graves gives Gyges the
meaning of 'earthborn', another concept we have come to expect in
connection with our Sirius- complex of myths.
Just as the stones Deukalion and his wife Pyrrha threw over their shoulders
had been torn from their mother earth, Gaia, and were her bones turning
into men to repopulate the earth after the flood and the voyage of the
Greek ark, and just as Jason and also Cadmus sowed the teeth and they
sprang up as 'earth-born men', so we find that Gyges is also 'earth-born'.
And just as Gilgamesh sought strength from the earth when 'his teeth
shook' in the earth, so we discover that gygas means 'mighty' or 'strong',
and is also used in Hesiod to refer to 'the sons of Gaia (Earth)', which is as
specific as we could wish, for it gives an undeniable and conscious
connection between 'the children of Gaia' of Deukalion, 'the offspring of
Gaia' of the Colchian teeth, and 'the sons of Gaia' who were a race of
giants, and Gyges, whose mother was Gaia.
And we are not to forget that Gyges, like Briareus, can mean 'strength'
and 'might', though with the particular shade of meaning added that it is
strength and might drawn from the earth, which could be one way of
describing a super-dense body of degenerate matter. After all, super-
dense matter is 'strong earth'. We must also remember that Gyges has
fifty heads.
As for the name Cottus, the third of the three monsters, Graves tells us
that it is not Greek. Graves says (3, 1):
The Cottians might possibly derive their name from an Egyptian word.
Perhaps it was which means 'oarsmen' and has been applied to 'divine
oarsmen'. With a different determinative and when not applied to a man,
the word means 'orbit', 'revolution', 'to go around'. And the word in
Egyptian was also applied to a group of specific people in a specific region.
The Qetu were the natives of Qeti, which Wallis Budge says was,
'The Circle', that is, 'the North Syrian coast about the Gulf of Issus and the
deserts between the Euphrates and the Mediterranean'.
There was also an Egyptian precedent for applying the same name to a
god. Qeti is 'a god of the abyss', and a reduplicated version of the name
which repeats the 'T' as Cotytto does is Qetqet, who is significantly one of
the thirty- six decans. In addition, Qetshu. refers specifically to 'the ''nude"
or Syrian goddess',* which seems clearly to be an orgiastic element, for
Graves says that Cotytto was an orgiastic goddess.
It seems fairly clear, then, that Cottus is of Egyptian origin and originally
applies to the orbit of Sirius B, and in the Egyptian era the particular term
came to be associated with a people of Syria who moved to Thrace, and
even in Egyptian times the name had all its applications to a foreign
people, a foreign orgiastic goddess, and Sirius-related concepts including
both oarsmen and an orbit, two ideas which I have frequently connected
before. Here in Egyptian we find an orbit called by a name which applies
equally well to divine oarsmen. And the word survives in the fifty- headed
Cottus! Fifty oarsmen, fifty years in the orbit, fifty heads to the Sirius-
monster. How simple, how elegant.
I am indebted to my friend Michael Scott, who once rowed at Oxford, for
the fine suggestion that there could hardly be a better analogy of any
symbol with its intended meaning of 'a specific interval both of space and
time' than the oar-stroke.
I should point out here that the earliest name for the figure known to us as
Hercules was, according to Robert Graves in The Greek Myths (132. h.),
none other than Briareus. And we also have learned that the earliest form
of Jason was Hercules (whose earliest form was Briareus). We thus find
that Briareus, with his fifty heads, was the earliest captain of the fifty-
oared Argo. Briareus, whose name means 'weight'. And whose brother's
name means both 'oarsman' and 'orbit'.
Apart from the three monsters each with fifty heads, Gaia also gave birth
to Garamas, who was not only earth-born, but who 'rose from the plain'
like the earth-born men of Colchis. Graves says:9 'The Libyans, however,
claim that Garamas was born before the Hundred-handed Ones and that,
when he rose from the plain, he offered Mother Earth (Gaia) a sacrifice of
the sweet acorn.' The acorn of the oak - the oaks being representative of
Dodona, of the piece of the Argo's prow, and of the Colchian grove!
I need hardly point out to the alert reader that the southern bank of the
Upper Niger is the home of the Dogon! What should be investigated on the
spot is the relations which subsist between this sad shaggy remnant of the
Garamantians and the surrounding Dogon and other tribes. Also, the
villagers of Koromantse might be discovered to possess the Sirius lore
themselves.
On the most detailed French map of this area there is a village called
Korienze only sixty miles from Bandiagara and in the heart of Dogon
country. It is on the south bank of the Upper Niger and is presumably the
place Graves means.
In line with this important discovery I should point out that Herodotus says
in Book Two (103 and 106): 'It is undoubtedly a fact that the Colchians are
of Egyptian descent . . . the Colchians, the Egyptians, and the Ethiopians
are the only races which from ancient times have practiced circumcision.
The Phoenicians and the Syrians of Palestine themselves admit that they
adopted the practice from Egypt, and the Syrians who live near the rivers
Thermodon and Parthenius, as well as their neighbors the Macronians, say
that they learnt it only a short time ago from the Golchians. No other
nations use circumcision, and all these are without doubt following the
Egyptian lead.'
We shall recall if we read the Argonautica that the Argonauts were blown
off course to Libya, where they were stranded for some time. In his book
Herodotean Inquiries?11 Seth Benardete speaks of the Garamantes to
whom he gives an alternative name, the Gamphasantes. They are
described in Herodotus, Book Four (after 178) as inhabitants of 'Further
inland to the southward, in the part of Libya where wild beasts are found'.
At 179 Herodotus connects Jason and the Argonauts' visit to Libya with the
eventual foundation in Libya 'of a hundred Grecian cities'.
Benardete's comments in his book connect the Argo's visit to Libya and
the Libyan city of Cyrene:
Herodotus first indicates how closely Libya, Egypt, Scythia, and Greece are
joined.
They said that golden objects fell from heaven, which flashed fire when
the two older brothers of Kolaxais approached them, but Kolaxais himself
was able to take them home. To these celestial [sic: poiemata] there here
correspond the oracular verses of Delphi which, in both the Theban and
Cyrenaic versions, prompted the sending of a colony to Libya.
Robert Graves got his information12 on the Garamantians going to the
Upper Niger by way of Libya from a series of books by Eva Meyrowitz, an
anthropologist who spent many years studying the Akan tribe of Ghana,
directly south of the Dogon.13 Graves paraphrases her books:
'In the eleventh century a.d. they moved still further south to what is now
Ghana.'
I might point out that the path of migration from Timbuctoo to Ghana goes
straight through the country of the Dogon, whose territory is directly south
of Timbuctoo. So it is quite clear by now that peoples intimately connected
with the Sirius tradition came from Greece to Libya and thence south to
the Libyan oases of the Sahara, thence further south-west past the Sahara
to Timbuctoo and the region of the Dogon where they mingled with
Negroes of the Dogon region and took their local language for themselves,
eventually becoming indistinguishable from the local African population in
appearance and speech, but retaining their old traditions as their most
secret doctrines.
It almost seems too amazing to be true, that we should have begun this
book by considering a strange African tribe, then considered similar Sirius
traditions in the Mediterranean stemming from ancient Egypt, and then be
led back again to the African tribe whom we discover to be directly
descended from the Mediterranean peoples privy to the Sirius complex!
Later, I shall mention a bit more about the Pelasgians, who lived in Arcadia
and, so Herodotus informs us, were not conquered by the Dorian invaders
of Greece in pre-classical times. They have been among the main
continuers of the Sirius tradition as, apparently, have the people they
displaced by force. But I mention them now to give more relevant
information for this Libyan connection.
Graves says:15
'According to the Pelasgians, the goddess Athene was born beside Lake
Tritonis in Libya', and: 'Plato identified Athene, patroness of Athens, with
the Libyan goddess Neith . . . Neith had a temple at Sais (in Egypt), where
Solon was treated well merely because he was an Athenian . . . Herodotus
writes (IV, 189):
"Athene's garments and aegis were borrowed by the Greeks from the
Libyan women ..."
... Ethiopian girls still wear this costume . . . Herodotus adds here that the
loud cries of triumph, olulu, ololu, uttered in honour of Athene above (Iliad,
vi. 297-301) were of Libyan origin. Tritone means "the third queen".'
Again the reference to the three goddesses. And recall that in Libya was
the shrine of Ammon equivalent to the Dodona oracle of Zeus, where the
other of the two birds flew from Egyptian Thebes.
Athene was also known as Pallas Athene, for reasons given in Graves. He
adds that 'the third Pallas' was father of 'the fifty Pallantids, Theseus's
enemies (see 97.g and 99.a), who seem to have been originally fighting
priestesses of Athene'.
While again on the subject of the fifty, I want to note more information
concerning Cerberus, the fifty-headed hound of Hades. Graves says:17
'Echidne bore a dreadful brood to Typhon: namely, Cerberus . . .', etc.
Recall that Typhon was identified with Python18 in the Homeric Hymn to
Apollo and elsewhere ; Python was the particular monster, slain by Apollo
according to legend, whose rotting corpse lay directly under the oracle of
Delphi.
Graves continues:19
'Cerberus, associated by the Dorians with the dog- headed Egyptian god
Anubis who conducted souls to the Underworld, seems to have originally
been the Death-goddess Hecate, or Hecabe; she was portrayed as a bitch
because dogs eat corpse flesh and howl at the moon. . . . Orthrus, who
fathered [various creatures] on Echidne was Sirius, the Dog-star, which
inaugurated the Athenian New Year. He had two heads, like Janus,
because the reformed year at Athens had two seasons, not three.'
For why would the three goddesses sail in their Sirius boat in Egyptian
representations which have absolutely nothing to do with a calendar? In
short, the three goddesses and the three-headedness always to do with
Sirius are not calendrical at all. But by the extremely late times of Athens,
calendrical explanations may have become fashionable for what could not
otherwise be explained.
In the above passages I hope the reader will note the specific information
that connects Anubis (which much earlier I identified on altogether
separate grounds with the orbit of Sirius B) with the Greek version of
Anubis, Cerberus, with his fifty heads. In the Egyptian tradition I hadn't
found any specific connection between Anubis and fifty.
It is true that we have found the Egyptian word qe(i means both 'oarsman'
and 'orbit', and as there were always fifty oarsmen in the Sirius-related
boats, both in Greek and Sumerian saga, we were on our way to an
identification on solid grounds. But here at last a specific connection has
come to light, and would seem to be a splendid confirmation of my
identification! And furthermore, we see that the dog Orthrus who was the
brother of Cerberus, was specifically identified with Sirius. We thus have
found in the Mediterranean world all the elements of the description of the
Sirius system which were possessed by the Dogon.
And we have also traced the Mediterranean Sirius lore to the Dogon by
way of Libya, then the Saharan oases, then Timbuktu, and finally the south
bank of the Upper Niger and the Dogon region. Thus, through thousands of
miles and thousands of years, we have discovered the source of that
strange tradition still intact among a tribe deep in 'darkest Africa'.
The father of Orthrus the Sirius-dog and his brother Cerberus the fifty-
headed dog was the monster Typhon whom we mentioned a moment ago.
And it is worth while for us to see what Liddell and Scott's Greek Lexicon
has to say about the meaning of the name Typhon and also related forms
of this word.
Typhlos means 'blind' and specifically 'in the sense of misty, darkened'.
The verb Typhloo means 'to blind, make blind' or 'to blind, baffle'. It also
means 'to wrap in smoke'.
A possible origin of the word Typhon may be the Egyptian word tephit or
teph-t, both of which have the meaning of 'cave, cavern, hole in the
ground'. This Egyptian word describes perfectly the chasm at Delphi in
which Python was supposed to lie rotting, his corpse giving off the fumes
out of the earth. And, as we have seen, Python was equated with Typhon
in early times.
Hence the Up of Delphi has a tephit, or cavernous abyss beneath it. Later I
shall consider the Egyptian word Up in its further ramifications. But for the
moment it is sufficient to see that Typhon almost certainly originates from
the Egyptian word describing a cavern or hole in the earth, as the
Egyptians founded the tep or oracle at Delphi and naturally used their own
word to describe the cavern.
As Delphi passed into Greek culture and the Egyptians became forgotten
in all but vague legends such as the famous visit of the Canopic Herakles
to Delphi, etc., the original word to describe Delphi's cavern would have
been retained through the natural conservative inclinations of religious
organizations who retain antique words and language for notoriously long
periods of time, forgetting their origins.
Hence a Greek who had no knowledge of Egyptian culture or that it had
ever penetrated to his homeland in earlier days would nevertheless call
the cavern at Delphi which produced the sulphurous fumes the den of
Typhon after its original Egyptian designation of tephit. It has been noted
by people other than myself and with greater knowledge that the
Sumerian word for cavern, abzu, survived in Greek as abysses, leading to
our English 'abyss'.
The fumes arising from the Delphic cavern obviously gave rise to the
usage of forms of the word for 'obscuring with smoke, dark', etc. And the
fact that the personified Typhon became closely associated with Sirius was
obviously due to the fact that this word which had entered Greek usage
and been extended to considerations of 'darkness, obscurity', was useful
in the traditional Sirius lore as adopted in Greece. The other meanings for
the word then developed from there, except for the obvious popular
usages, such as applying the word to a description of 'vanity' because
vanity clouds a man's intellect - a really superb extension of the meaning
for use in poetic and common expression.
Anubis was not originally meant to be a death god per se and his
association with mummies and the underworld has been previously
explained. Egyptian mummies were, as I have said, embalmed over a
period of seventy days, to correspond with the number of days each year
when the star Sirius was 'in the Duat, or Underworld', and was not visible
in the night sky. Hence the seventy-day 'death' of Sirius each year was the
fundamental and earliest underworld aspect of the Sirius lore.
But the priests knew that the dark companion of Sirius was never visible. It
would be worth while now to look a little more closely at the dog Orthrus,
who was Sirius. Orthrus is the dog of the herdsman Eurytion. Graves
interestingly compares this Eurytion with the Sumerian Enkidu, the
companion of Gilgamesh who was hairy and wild and came from the
steppes and was imbued with incredible strength:20
Perseus and Danae also have a connection with Argos. And as for the
Graces here mentioned, their worship was first instituted at Orchomenos.
The Graces are often associated with Hermes and called 'the Graces of
Hermes' and this occurs especially in a work such as The Lives of the
Philosophers by the historian Eunapius, whose Universal History was
unfortunately lost. In the work just referred to, Eunapius tells us something
extremely interesting about the area of Behdet and Canopus in Egypt.
'He crossed to Alexandria, and then so greatly admired and preferred the
mouth of the Nile at Canobus, that he wholly dedicated and applied
himself to the worship of the gods there, and to their secret rites.'27
And also:
'Antoninus was worthy of his parents, for he settled at the Canobic mouth
of the Nile and devoted himself wholly to the religious rites of that
place'28
This is interesting, that there were rites peculiar to Canopus to which one
could exclusively devote oneself. A little later,29 Eunapius mentions that
the Christians destroyed the temples in the vicinity and demolished the
Serapheum at Alexandria, and settled their black-robed monks on the spot
of Canopus in order to supplant paganism there. Hence, we see that that
particular place had a unique importance. Surely it should be excavated.
The pagan mysteries of the place, eventually destroyed by the Christians,
probably continued the Behdet tradition and were related to our Sirius
question.
But back now to the quotations from Pindar given above. What is so
especially significant about this passage of Pindar's is the expression 'and
his fifty daughters on shining thrones'. It will be remembered that the
throne is the hieroglyph for Ast or Isis identified with Sirius, that the fifty
Anunnaki of Sumer were on thrones, etc. All through the earlier traditions
there has been a great deal of emphasis on the throne in connection with
the Sirius material, and here in the late Pindar we find the same.
There are further connections between the Sirius system and Argos and
Danaos. Connections with the Minyan Libyans are many. The father of
Danaos was himself 'the son of Libya by Poseidon'.30
Danaos was also 'sent to rule Libya5.31 However, the connection with
Egypt is also strong. Danaos's twin brother was called Aegyptos, of whom
we read:32
'Aegyptus was given Arabia as his kingdom; but also subdued the country
of the Melampodes [the 'blackfooted people' - the Egyptians], and named
it Egypt after himself. Fifty sons were born to him of various mothers:
Libyans, Arabians, Phoenicians, and the like.'
So we see Danaos's twin brother had fifty sons. And Danaos had fifty
daughters. This demolishes Graves's argument that they must refer to a
college of fifty moon-priestesses, and emphasizes the connection with the
fifty male companions of Gilgamesh, fifty male Argonauts, fifty male
Anunnaki, etc. Notice the two related but also quite definitely separate
groups of fifty here.
Danaos learns that his brother wishes to marry his fifty sons to Danaos's
fifty daughters with the aim of their killing the fifty daughters after
marrying them. So Danaos and his daughters all take flight to Rhodes*
and then to Greece where they land and Danaos announces that he is
divinely chosen to become the King of Argos. Note that he chooses Argos.
The way in which Danaos became King of Argos was that a wolf came
down from the hills and killed the lead bull and the Argives accepted the
omen.
'Danaus, convinced that the wolf had been Apollo in disguise, dedicated
the famous shrine to wolfish Apollo at Argos, and became so powerful a
ruler that all the Pelasgians of Greece called themselves Danaans. He also
built the citadel of Argos, and his daughters brought the Mysteries of
Demeter, called Thesmophoria, from Egypt and taught these to the
Pelasgian women. But, since the Dorian invasion, the Thesmophoria are no
longer performed in the Peloponnese, except by the Arcadians.'33
With no jackal in Europe, the wolf was the candidate. Wolfish Apollo is
jackalish. It was from this changing of the jackal into the wolf through
adaptation to the European clime that those peculiar wolf traditions arose
in wild Arcadia which developed in pre-classical times into the werewolf
concepts. Human blood-sucking vampires, the use of garlic for protection
against them, and lycanthropy of werewolves all luxuriated in the wilds of
Arcady among the Pelasgian survivors in pre-classical Greece after the
Dorian invasion.
The fact that Aegyptus of Egypt had fifty sons as well and that Danaos's
daughters (or sons) taught the Egyptian mysteries to the Greeks all
indicates that what transpired was a transplanting from Egypt to Greece of
the all-important tradition to be common to both countries from then on -
the fifty as linked with the Dog Star Sirius and as celestial thrones. In other
words, the mystery of the orbit of Sirius B around Sirius A in its fifty
celestial steps.
According to Graves,34 the serpent's teeth sown by Jason were 'a few left
over from Cadmus's sowing at Thebes'. Graves says of the latter:35 'A
small tribe, speaking a Semitic language, seems to have moved up from
the Syrian plains to Cadmeia in Caria. Cadmus is a Semitic word meaning
"eastern" whence they crossed over to Boeotia towards the end of the
second millennium, seized Thebes, and became masters of the country.
'The myth of the Sown Men...'
But before continuing his explanation I shall quote his description of the
events. In Plate 15 is an ancient Greek vase painting of Cadmus standing
above a hare, just as Orion 'stands' on Lepus, the Hare, in the night sky.
When he asked where Europe (his lost sister) might be found, the
Pythoness (of Delphi) advised him to give up his search and, instead,
follow a cow and build a city wherever she should sink down for weariness.
... at last (the cow) sank down where the city of Thebes now stands, and
here (Cadmus) erected an image of Athene, calling it by her Phoenician
name of Onga. Cadmus, warning his companions that the cow must be
sacrificed to Athene without delay, sent them to fetch lustral water from
the Spring of Ares [Mars], now called the Castalian Spring, but did not
know that it was guarded by a great serpent.
Cadmus tossed a stone among them [just as Jason later did] and they
began to brawl, each accusing the other of having thrown it, and fought so
fiercely that, at last, only five survived; Echion, Udaeus, Chthonius,
Hyperenor, and Pelorus, who unanimously offered Cadmus their services.
But Ares demanded vengeance for the death of the serpent, and Cadmus
was sentenced by a divine court to become his bondsman for a Great
Year.
Note here that the serpent's teeth motif is again linked with the concept of
fifty. For the Great Year is a hundred months long and consists of two
separate cycles of fifty months, as I have mentioned before. It is just as
well for us that Hyginus and Apollodorus have preserved this interesting
bit of information which Graves has passed on from them. The 'Spring of
Ares' resembles 'the grove of Ares' where the golden fleece was hung, and
both were guarded by serpents. And in both the story of the Argo and this
story the hero throws a stone in the midst of the sown men - the stone
motif again, a thrown stone being central to the Deukalion story and to the
Orchomenos ghost, etc. And it was a stone with which Cadmus crushed
the serpent's head as well.
The cow in the Cadmus story is also reminiscent of the Egyptian sacred
cow Hathor, who was identified with Isis. Hathor is the form we use for the
original Egyptian He-t-Her, which means 'the House of Horus'. (Horus is, of
course, our form for the Egyptian Heru, or Her.)
The reader will recall a previous discussion of the word Neb meaning
'Lord'. Neb-t is merely the female form of the word, and means 'Lady'. And
presumably the house of which Nephthys is the Lady is the House of
Horus. In other words, the lady is just as much a resident of the area of
Sirius as is Sirius herself. Just because she is the dark sister does not mean
that she is not quite as much at home in the House of Horus as Isis.
So much for the cow who led Cadmus to the serpent's teeth. It will all
make even more sense as we go along. Wait till we find out what
'serpent's teeth' really means.
Cadmus killed the serpent in the same sense as Apollo killed the Python at
Delphi (see 21.12). The names of the Sown Men - Echion ("viper"); Udaeus
("of the earth")'. ..
At this point I shall interrupt him once again.38 Let us look at this strange
name Udaeus. We should note that the similar word biting with the teeth'
and comes from the verb root and its infinitive dakein which means 'to
bite - of dogs'! Perhaps this is a clue as to the importance of teeth, since in
Greek there was this word 'to bite' which specifically referred to the biting
of dogs and it may be that this aspect of dogs was incorporated at a pre-
Hellenic early date into the lore of the Dog Star by one of those many
puns which proliferated in all the high civilizations of the Mediterranean.
For Thebes was the site of the Castalian Spring, as just mentioned a
moment ago, and was intimately part of the milieu of the ludi of the
ancient world.
The very same sign is incorporated in the sign for art meaning 'jawbone
with teeth'. Remember Gilgamesh with his jaw to the earth 'and his teeth
shook'. Certainly this all seems to mean something. In fact, the same
single sign which means 'the land on one side of the Nile5 and looks like a
tilted tooth, also has the general meaning of 'earth', which latter concept
is so important in all the later Greek Sirius-traditions.
It may well be that all these puns on the determinative hieroglyphic sign
for Sirius came, in the usual way with the pun-loving Egyptian priests, to
form a complicated body of Sirius doctrine involving teeth, Earth-born,
ring-shaped, falcon or hawk (Circe), etc., etc. It should therefore not
surprise us in the least to learn that the ancient Egyptian word for 'tooth',
abeh has exactly the same hieroglyph as the word for Earth. Hence the
origin, almost without question, of the connection between teeth and the
Earth!
For in ancient Egypt they were written by the identical sign, which were
tilted forms of the same sign used to represent Sirius!
SUMMARY
The monsters Cottus, Briareus, and Gyges of Greek mythology each had
fifty heads. Briareus was the original name of the figure later called
Hercules, and as Hercules was the original Jason, it is seen that the
original commander of the fifty-oared Argo was a fifty-headed gentleman.
The name Briareus is derived from words meaning 'strength' and 'weight'.
Gyges also means 'strength'.
As for the name Cottus, Robert Graves says that it is not Greek. In fact, it
seems to be derived ultimately from Egyptian qeti meaning 'oarsmen' (not
surprising, since Briareus was the Original commander of the fifty
oarsmen), and also 'orbit'. The fact that in Egyptian the words for
'oarsman' and 'orbit' are the same may explain why fifty oarsmen are
symbolic of a fifty-year orbit.
The Argo was reported to have stopped in Libya for some time, which
resulted in the foundation in Libya of 'a hundred Grecian cities'. The
Libyans from whom the Garamantians came are reputed to be 'descended
from the Argonauts' through migrant Lemnian Greeks who settled in Libya.
These same Garamantians over hundreds Indeed, thousands - of years in
their migration to Mali obviously brought to that region as the most secret
and holy of all their sacred traditions the sacred Sirius tradition now
propounded by the Dogon, who are presumably their descendants. (The
Dogon themlelvcs insist that they were definitely not originally native to
their present homeland in Mali.)
The Libyan version of the Greek goddess Athena had 'fifty Pallantids' as
priestesses, with evident association at an early time with the
Garamantians.
The dog Orthrus, brother of the god Cerberus who had fifty heads, was
specifically identified by the Greeks with the star Sirius. Robert Graves
equates Anubis, Cerberus, and Hecate with each other. This brings
together Anubis-the-orbit with Cerberus the fifty-headed dog, and Hecate
meaning 'one hundred', as well as Orthrus who is Sirius the Dog Star.
Orthrus (Sirius) was the dog of the herdsman Eurytion whom Robert
Graves compares with Enkidu, the companion of Gilgamesh. It is possible
the name Orthrus may be derived from the Egyptian urt meaning 'the
setting of a star'. We see this same word used in reference in Chapter
Seven to the Sirius complex.
The Argo carried the fifty daughters of Danaos, who was 'sent to rule
Libya' and had a twin brother Aegyptos, king of Egypt (which got its name
from him), who had fifty sons. Sometimes Danaos is said to have fifty sons
instead of fifty daughters. It was obviously their number which mattered,
not their sex.
'The old man of the sea', named Nereus to the Greeks, had fifty daughters
called the Nereids (who are enumerated by Hesiod in his Theogony, 241).
An 'old man of the sea' is reminiscent of Oannes and Enki - of amphibious
wise men generally.
The Greek poet Pindar (fifth century B.C.) describes the fifty Danaids as
'on shining thrones', reminiscent of the fifty Anunnaki on their shining
thrones, of Isis on her shining throne. (The throne is the hieroglyph of Isis
who is identified with Sirius.)
Danaos is also associated with the wolf- or dog-motif, and that motif refers
to the Dog Star, Sirius.
The four books by Eva Meyrowitz are now out of print. In the fourth book
of the series (see Note 14) the author describes the series: 'This is the
fourth volume of the series of which the first, The Sacred State of the Akan
[195,1], gives a picture of the old Akan civilization. The second, Akan
Traditions of Origin [1952], deals with the early history of the people who
now call themselves Akan. The third, The Akan of Ghana, their Ancient
Beliefs [1958, originally entitled The Akan Cosmological Drama], showed
the development of their religion. The fourth, here presented, attempts to
show that Akan religion, which includes the cult of the divine king and the
main features of their social organization, is largely derived from Ancient
Egypt.' Eva Meyrowitz is an anthropologist from Cape Town who worked in
the Gold Coast (now Ghana) from 1936-45 studying the peoples of that
country. The third volume mentioned above (1958) contains a final
chapter which is entitled 'Analogies to Akan Beliefs and Customs in Libyan
North Africa'. As for the Akan peoples, they speak languages of the Twi
branch of the Kwa sub-family of the Western Sudanic linguistic stock and
inhabit the eastern part of Ivory Coast, the southern half of Ghana, and
parts of Togo. The majority are in Ghana, where they settled in successive
waves between the 11 th and 18th centuries. All of Meyrowitz's books
above, and the fourth mentioned in Note 14, were published by Faber in
London.
The Divine Kingship in Ghana and Ancient Egypt (originally entitled The
Akan of Ghana, the Akan Divine Kingship and Its Prototype in Ancient
Egypt), Faber, London, 1960. Went out of print in February 1963. The map
is adapted from one in this book.
Ibid., pp. 421-5 (text 472): 'Next, into the sacred places they imported
monks, as they called them, who were men in appearance but led the
lives of swine, and openly did and allowed countless unspeakable crimes.
But this they accounted piety, to show contempt for things divine. For in
those days every man who wore a black robe and consented to behave in
unseemly fashion in public possessed the power of a tyrant, to such a
pitch of virtue had the human race advanced! All this however I have
described in my Universal History. They settled these monks at Canobus
also, and thus fettered the human race to the worship of slaves . . .'
Among the unspeakable crimes being referred to was the destruction by
Bishop Theodosius of the Great Library of Alexandria because it contained
'heathen literature'. Hence, the loss of the hundreds of thousands of books
from the ancient world, which everyone laments so often, took place at
the hands of a fanatical Christian bishop attempting to wipe out all trace
of history before Christ, and not as the result of an accidental fire from the
time of Mark Anthony, as the story is usually told.
I will complete the quotation from Graves here: '. . . Chthonius (''of the
soil"); Hyperenor ("man who comes up") and Pelorus ("serpent") - are
characteristic of oracular heroes. But "Pelorus" suggests that all
Pelasgians, not merely the Thebans, claimed to be born in this way; their
common feast is the Peloria (see 1.2.)'. The remaining three names are
thus seen to be quite as one would expect.
The frequent incorporation of the serpent into late Sirius-lore among the
Greeks probably stems from a pun or corruption of the Egyptian
determinative form for 'goddess' in reference to the goddess Sothis-Isis
(Sirius).
which can also (by pun) be read quite literally as: 'serpent's tooth'! In
addition to this Egyptian pun, there is a Greek pun connected with the
story of Jason sowing the teeth. In Greek the word which describes the
growing of a tooth from the gum is anatole; a variant is anatello. These
words would describe the growing from the ground of the teeth, and 'to
make to rise up' or 'to give birth to' is their basic meaning. However, these
words are also used to describe the risings of stars and constellations.
Hence, if one wanted to say that the star Sirius was rising at the horizon,
one could pun and say:
'The tooth is growing up from the ground as from a gum, that is, the
ground is giving birth to a tooth.'
Hence all the many 'earth-born' creatures linked to the stars, and
especially Sirius. As a matter of fact, in translating the now lost early Argo
tales from Greek into English it is problematical whether instead of saying
'the teeth in the ground gave birth to . . .', etc., one should really have
considered the equally literal translation 'Sirius, namely "the tooth", rose
over the horizon.'
It may be that some of the puns taken over from Egyptian into Greek
might have involved the same misunderstandings that ours could do with
regard to translating the Greek into English. There may thus be a double
layer of obfuscation between English readers and the true subject-matter.
Those experts in Greek mythology who may feel safe in discussing 'earth-
born' mythological creatures as being sprung from the earth in a direct
sense, mud and grime no doubt still caking their hides as they pop up into
the air, may be better advised to take into consideration that these
creatures were not meant really to be described as coming out of holes in
the ground so much as rising over the horizon, due to the fact that they
are stars and constellations. And if they are such cosmic figures their
peculiar shapes and characteristics become immediately less bizarre and,
instead, more meaningful.
We know that Colchis was the place where Helios stabled his horses and
rose each morning, according to Greek mythological tradition. Since
Colchis was thus the archetypal eastern rising point to the Greeks, being
at the far eastern end of the Black Sea and being 'as far east as you can
get' to a Greek, it actually represented 'the East'. Thus it makes sense that
Jason should have sowed the serpent's teeth there.
For the growing of the teeth from the ground at that precise point was
symbolic language for:
The reason why the only other example of serpent's teeth being sown took
place at Greek Thebes, when Cadmus sowed them there, is that Egyptian
Thebes and Aea at Colchis are equidistant from Greek Thebes (see Figure
14). Hence, a probable reason for the name of Thebes being used in
Greece. Greek Thebes is in a sense a 'code' for Colchis, since an action
performed there may be understood as taking place within the symbolic
framework of the Thebes Colchis-Thebes triangle (Figure 14).
However, the rationalist's comment is not one upon symbolic thinking but
merely one upon himself, acting as a label to define him as one of the
walking dead.
Greek Thebes Phthiotides - quite distinct from the main Greek Thebes
almost adjoins Iolchus in Thessaly, a few miles away, from which port
Jason and the Argo sailed to Colchis. The voyage of the Argo may be seen
as a symbolic journey. For to travel from Greek Thebes - either the proper
one or a nominal substitute - to Colchis was equivalent to travelling from
Greek Thebes to Egyptian Thebes: the distance was the same.
The word Argus has even applied to a dog. It was the name of the old
hunting hound of Odysseus (Ulysses) who recognized his master Odysseus
when he finally returned from his voyages, and died as it greeted him. No
one else had recognized Odysseus after twenty years' absence except for
the faithful old dog, who upon greeting his long lost master, expired on the
spot.
Argus has also been used by the Greeks as their name for the hundred-
eyed monster set by Hera to watch over Io. And it was Io the cow who led
Cadmus from Delphi to Thebes where he sowed the serpent's teeth.
If the words ark, Argo, Argus, etc., could be construed as having an actual
linguistic derivation from the ancient Egyptian (which would have had to
precede by some time the Aryan invasion of India circa 1500 B.C., as the
word exists in Sanskrit, as we shall see shortly), then it might ultimately
be from arq and arqi which are
These related words have various curious meanings in Egyptian and can
be written many ways other than the simplest given above. Arq means 'to
complete, to finish', in the sense of a cycle. It also means 'the last' or 'the
end of anything'. For instance, arq renpet means 'the festival of the last
day of the year'. Arqit means 'the conclusion of a matter'. All these
meanings are reminiscent of the meaning of 'Argus' in Homer - to
represent the dog who witnesses Odysseus's return and immediately dies,
having seen his master's face once again after so many years. The great
cycle was completed - Odysseus was home.
Aria immediately Argus dies. Here in the earliest Greek literature we see
'Argus' used as a synonym for the Egyptian arq.
The Egyptian arqi is even more significant. Note the final determinative
(picture not used as a letter) is a sign which is a circle with a dot in the
middle. The meaning of this word is 'the end of a period, the last day of
the month'. This term, then, has calendrical usage. It can be applied as
well to any culmination of a period. Hera's monster Argus has a hundred
eyes, and there are a hundred months (comprising two sets of fifty) to a
Great Year. Here 'Argus' is a poetic synonym in early Greek tradition for
arqi, 'the end of a period' - its culmination, its total when completed.
What were these mysteries of Isis ? Well, they seem to have been related
to the Thesmophoria Mysteries which the daughters of Danaos were said
to have brought from Egypt to Argos. For in Liddell and Scott we find that
the name Thesmophoros ('law giving') was a name given to Isis. The name
was most commonly applied to Demeter, a Greek goddess, but was also
the name of Isis in Greece.
* Plutarch in 'Isis and Osiris' (378 D) informs us: 'Among the Greeks also
many things are done which are similar to the Egyptian ceremonies in the
shrines of Isis, and they do them at about the same time. At Athens the
women fast at the Thesmophoria sitting upon the ground.'5
In Wallis Budge we read3 from an Egyptian text of 'the star Septet (Sothis,
the Dog Star), whose seats are pure', which is a specific reference to there
being seats around Sirius - and, of course, there are fifty seats as we
know, which led to the fifty thrones of the Anunnaki, the fifty oarsmen of
the Argo, etc.
Here we have the deceased revolving like a sun in a purposeful way in 'the
horizon'. I don't think the Egyptians could possibly have been more
specific and clear than this.
'The mention of Orion and Sothis is interesting, for it shows that at one
time the Egyptians believed that these stars were the homes of departed
souls.'
Having learned this (a belief held as well by the Dogon, as we know), let
us return to our word arq which I believe to be the origin of ark and Argo
and Argus in Greek, all of which I claim are related to Sirius. Perhaps the
reader will not be too amazed if by now I inform him that arq heh is a
'necropolis' and arq-hehtt is 'the Other World' - which we have just this
moment learned was located by the early Egyptians at the star Sirius!
(Also remember that the guardian of the necropolis in Greek was a circe in
the Argo story.)
Arq has the further meaning of 'a measure', possibly because spirits are
normally measured in Arq-hehtt.
And for final touches of mystery, I will add that arq can mean 'to wriggle
(of a serpent)' - from 'binding around' - and arq ur is the word for that
mystery of mysteries, the Sphinx!
The same word means also 'silver', and Wallis Budge claims that the
Greek (argyros) is derived from it, which gave us our heraldic term argent
and the country's name Argentina. Since this term in Greek is derived
from arq ur (ur means 'chief or 'Great'), in the opinion of an eminent
expert, I believe there is no objection then to my suggestion that the other
Greek words came from arq and its forms.*
Area means 'worship, adoration'. Arjuna, besides being the famous Hindu
mythical personage, means 'white, clear' and 'made of silver' - this latter
being clearly a form of arq ur, the Egyptian variant form of arq meaning
'silver', which I mentioned a moment ago and which, according to Wallis
Budge, has the cognate in Greek which was just mentioned, argyros
meaning 'silver'.
If the reader can bear some other words, I propose to consider a few which
are important in other ways. I beg to refer again to the work of Wallis
Budge, which is becoming rather familiar to us now,7 since I have cited it
so frequently in recent pages. The reader must realize that we are nearing
the end of the matter and summon his last reserves of patience for the
final trudge across hieroglyphic soil, craggy though it may be.
In Wallis Budge, then,8 we find a passage from one of the Pyramid Texts
where Osiris is described in his role of husband of Sothis (Sirius) and
implored: 'Be not wroth in thy name of Tchenteru'. This plaintive plea must
be examined. What on earth is so terrible about this 'Tchenteru' ? Well, to
begin an explanation, the word tchentch means 'wrath, anger'. So that is
obviously the meaning of the word. But we have to continue to pursue
this.
Shortly afterwards in the same Pyramid Text we read of the birth of Horus,
the son of Osiris, by Sothis:
Wallis Budge says another form of tchens, 'weight', is tens, which also
means 'weight, heavy'. And the very next word in the giant dictionary is
teng which means 'dwarf! We thus see an apparent variation of the same
word meaning 'heavy' and 'dwarf', and this word is specifically applied to
the Sirius system.
But just in case there are any sceptics left (and there always are), a look
at the Egyptian word shenit will be helpful. This word means 'the divine
court of Osiris'. The same word shenit means 'circle, circuit', and shent
means 'a circuiting, a going round, revolution'. Shenu means 'circuit,
circle, periphery, circumference, orbit, revolution', and there is a specific
expression written:
which Wallis Budge gives, and which means 'the two circuits' - and twice
fifty is a hundred, giving us the Great Year. Shen ur means 'the Great
Circle' or 'the circuit of the Great Circle' or 'the islands of Shen-ur', which
last is interesting in that it indicates that this place of the Great Circle is
not only 'the divine court of Osiris', who is the husband of Sothis (Sirius),
but is also a place with islands (stars or planets) where one can
presumably live. It does seem that the Egyptians had quite as clear a
conception of the Sirius system as the Dogon have.
The verb shenu means 'to go round, to encircle', but the verb shen means
'to hover over', and presumably the great orbit is above us in the sky,
hovering over us in space.
The Egyptian word khemut means 'hot parching winds, the khamasin, or
khamsin, i.e. winds of the "fifty" hot days'. This is rather interesting.* In
late times 'the dog days' about the time of the rising of Sirius and called
'dog days' from 'the Dog Star' were supposed to be hot and scorching.
There are many references to this in writers like Pliny and Virgil. Here is an
earlier tradition of hot days incorporating the Sirian number fifty.
This same word khemut has familiar meanings in its related forms.
Khemiu-urtu means 'the stars that rest not'. Khemiu-hepu means 'a class
of stars'. Khemiu-hemu also means 'a class of stars'. In short, khemiu
means 'stars'. So khem (though apparently not used on its own in
surviving texts) really means 'star', as well as referring to fifty days. Khem
also has the meanings 'shrine, holy of holies, sanctuary', and 'little, small',
also 'he whose name is unknown, i.e. God', also 'god of procreation and
generative power', also 'to be hot', and 'unknown'.
All these meanings are relevant to the Sirius mysteries. The Sirius system
was held to be the source of generative and procreative power as we have
already seen, Sirius B was of course 'unknown', and was 'little, small', and
was a star that rests not (that is, it is always orbiting, which is not at all
usual for a star). And what is a star that rests not unless it be Sirius B ?
For only the planets, which were well known and differentiated by the
ancient Egyptians, 'rested not' with the remarkable Arabic khamsin, 'fifty'
and Hebrew khamshin, 'fifty', arc obviously derived from this Egyptian
exception of Sirius B. Comets and meteors apart, and they too were well
classed to themselves.
But a close inspection of the way things are said here won't let that kind of
interpretation stand up. Apart from the fact that the Egyptians were
incredibly precise in what they said: what is said in the texts is what is
said in the texts. One cannot just gloss over inconvenient precise
statements which seem unintelligible and tempt one to brush them aside
in order to 'get on with it'. In the above passage describing the khem or
stars, we find them associated with - indeed identified with - thrones,
which are quite separate from the throne of Osiris himself.
The same word, khemut, however, refers to fifty days; and to Sirius! We
therefore have the one remaining ingredient!
There is another Egyptian word which can shed some light on our subject.
A possible explanation of serpent's teeth and their springing up as soldiers
may result from a pun on the Egyptian word menu This word means both
'soldier' and 'to plough, to till the earth, to cultivate'. A combination of the
two meanings yields the strange idea of soldiers resulting from ploughing.
And in the Jason story, Jason has to yoke the bulls and plough the field -
only after which can he sow the serpent's teeth. Anyone who has read the
Argonautica will know this. Jason didn't just walk into some field, throw
some serpent's teeth about like birdseed, stand hack and presto! He had
to plough the field. He had to practise meni in order to produce meni.
Now we must turn our attention to the mysterious Egyptian word tcham. A
general meaning of tcham is 'sceptre', possibly because the meaning of
tcham en Anpu is the name of 'the magical sceptre of Anpu (Anubis)'.
Tchamti are 'bowmen' and Sirius is the Bow Star, as we know. Now, the
really intriguing meaning of tcham is 'a kind of precious metal'. There are
various expressions in the literature such as 'the finest tcham', 'real Cham
and 'Cham from the hill-top'. The impression one gets is that this Cham is
a pretty special commodity. Presumably Anubis's sceptre, which is the
Cham sceptre, is made of this Cham material.
A sceptre is an object which exercises rule and force. The fact that there is
'Cham from the hill-top' could either have a mundane meaning to the
effect that the stuff is a metal mined in the hills or more likely is
connected with Anubis, not only through his sceptre, but through the
hilltop as the residence of the god in the ziggurat sense such as one finds
in Sumer. For Anubis was known as 'Anubis of the hill'.
Of Pepi we read in the text that 'the appearance of this god in heaven,
which is like unto the appearance of Tern in heaven'. This is all gross
flattery typical for the texts mourning the dead Pharaohs. Every Pharaoh
looks like the great god of An and every other great god and does every
conceivable celestial thing. The Pharaoh is dead, long live the Pharaoh!
Now various gods, including the Governor of the Land of the Bow and Sept
(Sirius) 'under his trees', carry a ladder for Pepi. Pepi then 'appeareth on
the two thighs of Isis, Pepi reposeth on the two thighs of Nephthys'. Tern
puts Pepi at the head of all the gods, and 'Pepi setteth out in his boat',
with Horus. He then stands 'among the imperishable stars, which stand up
on their Cham sceptres, and support themselves on their staves'. This
seems to make clear that the metal Cham is also a specifically stellar
material which supports the stars! *
Then we read:11
The word au au means 'dog, jackal', and I suspect a connection with 'dog
star' and Anubis who is jackal/dog. Also the au-t en athen is the au-t of the
sun, or 'the course of the sun'.
But, to resume:
O ye gods of the Sky, ye imperishable ones, who sail over the Land of
Tehenu [the Tehentiu are 'the sparkling gods, the stellar luminaries' from
tehen which means 'to sparkle, to scintillate'] in your boats, and direct
them with your sceptres, this Pepi directeth his boat with you by means of
the uas sceptre [Uasar is a variant form of Asar, the name of Osiris, and
uas-t is 'a kind of animal, dog (?)'12] and the Cham sceptre, and he is
fourth with you. [indicating that he joins a group of three stars!]
The star Sirius is specifically described as taking his hand. Pepi himself is
transformed into a star, as clearly stated: 'Pepi is a star.'
He becomes a star and his hand is taken by the star Sirius, which can only
mean that he becomes a star in the Sirius system, and he 'becomes fourth
with them'. He then is identified in turn with the three other stars of the
Sirius system, which are Isis-Sothis, Nephthys, and Osiris. The first emits
"anes matter', the second is the female Nephthys, which may be identical
with the ('female Sorgho' or Sirius C of the Dogon (though sometimes
Nephthys refers to Sirius B in other contexts), and the third is called 'the
double of all the gods' - being the circling companion and the archetypal
'double' of many figures from Isis to Gilgamesh. This is quite obviously
Sirius B.
And there is Cham, the mysterious, potent stellar 'metal' which is said to
be the power of Anubis, whom we have earlier identified as the
personification of the orbit of Sirius B. And Cham is quite similar to the
word we dealt with earlier, tchens, meaning 'weight', and its related forms
tens 'heavy, weight', tensmen 'to be heavy' and the similar word teng
'dwarf.
We must recall that Anubis is our form of writing the actual Egyptian word
Anp or Anpu. The verb anp means 'to wrap around', obviously connected
with Anubis's role as sacred embalmer. It is significant that Anp heni is 'a
jackal-headed god who guarded the river of fire, a form of Anubis'. We
have already postulated that 'the river of fire' may be a way of describing
the orbit of the star Sirius B, so it is quite interesting to see that Anubis,
whom we have already identified as representing the orbit, is specifically
said to be the guardian of the same river of fire. And 'wrap around' could
have an orbital meaning as well as its obvious meaning of 'swathe'.
Tepi means 'the foremost point of the bows of the ship, the hindmost part
of the stern' - extremely specific and exactly fitting my specification of
what was important about the ship Argo. Tepi also means 'the first day of
a period of time', and I maintained earlier that the tip of the prow and the
tip of the stern of Argo (with fifty oar-places between them) was a symbol
of the orbit of Sirius B.
Also we will recall that arqi means 'the last day of a period of time'. So any
period of time has a first day called tepi and a last day called arqi in
Egyptian. And tepi describes the Argo just as arq is the origin of the very
word Argo. And Tepi is part of a crucial descriptive title of Anubis whom I
have equated with the Argo. There is even a further connection between
tepi and the Sirius-complex. The word tep ra means 'the base of a triangle'
and the words septa and septch both mean 'triangle' - Septit is Sirius and
the triangle is its hieroglyph.
The basic meaning of tep is 'mouth' (hence the meaning tep ra sebek '
"crocodile's mouth" - a disease of the eye') and even more fundamentally
'beginning or commencement of anything'. It is interesting for the study of
concepts of geometry to note that the Egyptians thought of the base of a
triangle as its 'mouth' or beginning.
Now, the link-up which takes place between arqi and tepi - that is, the end
of a cycle and the beginning of the next - could lead to some confusion
without much trouble. If the last day of the old cycle is the arqi and the
first day of the new cycle is the tepi, it would be easy to begin to think of
the arqi as the beginning -after all, it and the tepi are adjoining each other
and amount to practically the same thing. In a sense one could say that
the true end of a cycle is the beginning of the next.
Another link of the 'ark' words complex with the Argonaut story is found in
a strange place. One of the most peculiar of all treatises to survive from
ancient times is the curious Of the Names of Rivers and Mountains and of
such Things as are to be found therein.15 This treatise survived in the
corpus of Plutarch's writings but is obviously not by him. In fact ,the
treatise strikes me as basically a wild satire on a type of writing which was
then common.
One of the rivers discussed in this treatise is the Phasis, up which Jason
sailed to Aea in Colchis.
Without elaborating on this point, I merely wish to note that the very river
at Colchis once may have had a name which may be related to the 'ark'
word complex. Arcturus supposedly means 'bear-ward', referring to the
ward of the bear known to us as Ursa Major, the Big Dipper.
The name Phasis had connections with birds, such as with an expression
'the Phasian bird'. Recall the kirke or Circe connections with Colchis. It is
interesting then to note that the phassa in Greek is 'the ringdove'. Forms
of this word refer to doves and doves, are, as we have seen previously,
intimately associated with omphalos-oracle centres marked out from
Behdet.
And we know that Aea in Colchis, which is on the River Phasis and has
such associations with the Argo and the oracles, is related to doves in this
way and also because of the doves let fly from the arks and Argo. So the
fact that Phasis and phassa are connected is no surprise. This river,
whether named Phasis or Arcturus, seems to be aptly designated. It is also
to be noted that in Greek a phasso-phonos or 'dove-killer' is the name of a
kind of hawk.
Before leaving Plutarch behind, we might note also that in 'Isis and Osiris',
he tells us that a name for Osiris was Omphis. An interesting tie-in with the
oracles, attested by Plutarch as current in Egypt in his day.
To return to tepi, we note that tep ra means not only 'the base of a
triangle' but 'divine oracle', which is also quite relevant. I have postulated
that the oracles are connected with the Argo as representative of the orbit
of Sirius B, the beginning of which I designate by tepi, and we discover
that the name in Egyptian for 'oracle' is tep ra.
Tepi a became the word for 'ancestors', due to the connection of tepi with
the beginnings of things. And the tepi-aui-qerr-en-pet were 'the ancestor-
gods of the circle of the sky', which is again significant. Visitors, perhaps?
The Persians are not Semitic Arabs but are Indo-European, with a
language and original religion closely related to the Aryan Indians and to
Sanskrit. In fact, the earliest form of Sanskrit, which is called Vedic, is very
little different from the earliest form of Persian, which is called Avestan.
'Then Oromazes enlarged himself to thrice his former size, and removed
himself as far distant from the Sun as the Sun is distant from the Earth,
and adorned the heavens with stars. One star he set there before all
others as a guardian and watchman, the Dog-star. Twenty-four other gods
he created and placed in an egg. But those created by Areimanius, who
were equal in number to the others, pierced through the egg and made
their way inside; hence evils are now combined with good.'
'It is plain that the two sets of gods became intermingled, but whether the
bad gods got in or the good gods got out is not clear from the text.'
What does that sound like ? And Sirius is specifically stated to be the chief
one. And as Areimanius was the 'dark' god and his creations were 'dark',
then his creation in opposition to Sirius would be a 'dark' Sirius, wouldn't
it?
And as for the fifty gods arrayed round Sirius (speaking strictly from this
text one would have to say the forty-nine gods arrayed around Sirius, but I
speak of garbling of the tradition because, from what we already know
from other such descriptions from elsewhere, Sirius should really be the
fifty- first element) they obviously represent the fifty years of the orbit of
Sirius B in an egg shape around the Dog Star as its 'guardian and
watchman'.
'Chief priestesses were chosen by a foot race (the origin of the Olympic
Games), run at the end of the fifty months, or of forty-nine in alternate
years.'
Apart from the fact that Graves here speaks of 'the fifty months' as
antecedent to the Olympiads, a point which we discussed much earlier, we
see the alternative use of forty-nine and fifty as a quantitative time
measurement. This is rather like the shilly-shallying between forty-nine
and fifty in the above Persian description.
There is also this example from the Bible, in Leviticus 25, 8-13:
You shall count seven sabbaths of years, that is seven times seven years,
forty-nine years, and in the seventh month on the tenth day of the month,
on the Day of Atonement, you shall send the ram's horn round. You shall
send it through all your land to sound a blast, and so you shall hallow the
fiftieth year and proclaim liberation in the land for all its inhabitants. You
shall make this your year of jubilee.
Every man of you shall return to his patrimony, every man to his family.
The fiftieth year shall be your Jubilee. You shall not sow, and you shall not
harvest the self-sown crop, nor shall you gather in the grapes from the
unpruned vines, because it is a jubilee, to be kept holy by you. You shall
eat the produce direct from the land.
The above words and many which follow them, but which I will not quote
(as anyone can refer to the Bible for the full account), were spoken by God
to Moses on Mount Sinai, and are Jehovah's directions as to what the
Israelites must do. It is even more significant that Jehovah is made to say
much later in the same speech, all of which has been devoted to his talk of
his fifty-year jubilee and what must be done about it by the Israelites:
'. . . for it is to me that the Israelites are slaves, my slaves whom I brought
out of Egypt. I am the Lord your God.'
Remember that Egypt as the source of the Sirius tradition had had
'brought out' of it the Sirius mysteries and traditions by Danaos to Argos,
etc. It seems the Israelites too are part of this, though there will probably
not be a single rabbi unshaken by such a suggestion.
What, then, of the forty-nine versus the fifty? Perhaps for explanation we
should return to Robert Aitken's book The Binary Stars.17 In discussing the
length of time of the orbit of Sirius B around Sirius A he says:
'Thus, Volet's orbit, computed in 1931, which differs very little from my
own, published in 1918, has the revolution period 49.94, whereas Auwers
gave 49.42 years' the point being that the orbit of Sirius B takes between
forty-nine and fifty years and is somewhat less than fifty.
The Aitken book also firmly informs us that the orbit is an ellipse, as are
the orbits of all heavenly bodies. But of course, when speaking generally
of the orbit of Sirius B one does not say 'the ellipse', one says 'the circle'.
We say in common parlance: 'The planets circle round the sun,' even
though we know their orbits are elliptical. And most mentions of the orbit
of Sirius B in our sources are to 'the circle'. But, naturally, the Dogon draw
a specific ellipse in the sand to represent the orbit of Digitaria (Sirius B).
Figure 6 clearly compares the Dogon tribal diagram of the orbit of Sirius B
around Sirius A with a modern astronomical diagram of the same.
We have already seen near the beginning of the book how the Dogon not
only know that the orbit of Sirius B around Sirius A is an ellipse, but they
also know the astounding principle of elliptical orbits whereby that body
around which the orbit takes place inevitably tends to be at one of the two
foci of the ellipse. For the Dogon specifically say:
'Sirius ... is one of the centers of the orbit of a tiny star Digitaria'.
Now, in light of the dithering over forty-nine and fifty just referred to, and
the references to seven times seven equals forty-nine, seen in the light of
the fact that the orbital period of Sirius B is between forty-nine and fifty
years, which can be well accommodated as Graves says of the Sacred
Year, 'fifty months, or of forty-nine in alternate years', thereby balancing
out to a close approximation to reality by alternating the count
successively as fifty years, then forty-nine years, then fifty years . . . etc.,
one can understand why the orbit of Sirius B around Sirius A is 'counted
twice to be a hundred years', as the Dogon say and as was done in Egypt
and in Greece, and which led to the double-Sacred Year of one hundred
and the Greek goddess Hekate which means 'one hundred', and the
hundred-handed ones of Greek mythology, etc.
It was because orbits of Sirius B had to be counted in pairs in order better
to approximate a whole number. And the fact that this was the case
among the Dogon and the people of the Mediterranean area seems to
confirm beyond all doubt that the Sirius tradition of the Dogon is a survival
of the Mediterranean (namely, Egyptian) tradition brought by the
ancestors of the Dogon from the Garamantes Kingdom of Libya where it
had been taken by the Minyan immigrants.
'The period of the orbiting of Digitaria is about fifty years and corresponds
with the first seven reigns of seven years each of the first seven chiefs . . .'
And:
'This rule was in operation for forty-nine years for the first seven chiefs
who thus nourished the star and enabled the star to periodically renew the
world. But, the eighth chief having discovered the star . . .', etc.,
combining also the sacrifice of the sacred chief concept emphasized over
and over by Graves in his many references to the Sacred Year of fifty
months.
This passage from Griaule's account of what the Dogon told him almost
reads like a straight quotation from the Book of Leviticus in the Bible. Or
from The Greek Myths by Graves!
Can there be any further doubt that the two traditions are identical?
That the Dogon brought it from the Mediterranean world into an obscure
wilderness area where it has survived the ravages of time and empire
amazingly intact and specific?
And that the Mediterranean tradition in turn really was about Sirius and
the orbit of Sirius B, the great invisible ?
The Dogon tribe are really the last of the Argonauts, from whom they are
quite literally descended - being Minyans in the middle of West Africa.
Turning to the Egyptian word henti, one finds that it is a name for Osiris
and it also is 'a crocodile-headed god in the Tuat', which is the Egyptian
underworld, and it also means simply 'crocodile gods'.
It would seem that the fabulous Hen-t was a locality which had an
underworld counterpart and obviously is somehow connected closely with
both Osiris and crocodiles.
The name of this region, Hen-t, when taken as a common noun rather than
as a name, means 'dual'. This is a strong clue as to the nature of the
fabulous region. A region intimately connected with Osiris and whose
name means 'dual5 is reminiscent of Plutarch's description of that circle or
ellipse with its dual aspect of separating the light from the darkness.
Lest the reader think this far-fetched I must hasten to add a further
meaning of hen-t which is 'border, boundary', and another which is 'the
two ends of heaven' - which all appear to refer to a circle and have the
hen-t ('dual') nature of outside and inside and the two extremes connected
by a diameter. Hen-t also means 'end, limit', and a henti is a specific
period of time lasting for 120 years.
Remember that the Sigui of the Dogon was every sixty-years and two
Dogon Sigui make one Egyptian henti. In fact, a hen-t henti would be a
Sigui or, perhaps, vice versa, depending upon one's grammatical
preference. (The use of the word 'dual' can be rather ambivalent and be
construed as either halving or doubling by the context.) And this dual time
period is also rather like the two fifty- month periods which make the
hundred-month period of that sacred Great Year connected with Sirius,
which has a dual aspect.
Henti also has the meaning 'endless' - and the endless circling of Sirius B
around Sirius A could be referred to here. Some such idea must be at
work, otherwise how can the same word have the meaning of 'endless'
and also of '120 years'? It must be a reference to an 'endless' cycling of
perhaps the orbit of Sirius B or of the Sigui cycle's own basis. In any case,
it signifies that the 120-year period was arrived at as an endlessly
recurring cycle, and for that to have been the case, the 120-year period
must have been quite important, which is exactly what one would
anticipate. In Appendix III there is an explanation proposed for the true
nature of the Sigui . . . and of the henti based on certain astronomical
facts.
Considering that henti means all this and also means 'crocodile gods', etc.,
it is surprising to see that henn means 'to plough' and a hennti is 'a
ploughman'. One immediately thinks of Jason ploughing the field for the
dragon's (crocodile's ?) teeth. It may well be that the 'serpent's teeth'
motif which was a pun for 'the goddess Sirius' was extended in another
layer of pun to 'dragon's teeth' as a reference to crocodiles.
Ham means the hawk-god Seker and his henu boat. This boat (echoes of
celestial Argo) in 'the sacred boat of Seker, the Death-god of Memphis'.
This reminds us of the Circe-complex and the death-god of Colchis. It must
be emphasized that the hawk and the falcon are constantly being
confused with each other not only in Egyptian studies, but I have asked
falconers the difference between a hawk and a falcon and they vaguely
suggest a difference in colour of eyes and that the falcon tends to be
smallish.
A hawk supposedly has golden eyes (solar ?) whereas the falcon has
brown eyes. But their habits are not identical and as there are various
species of both hawk and falcon, confusion reigns supreme. The hawk and
falcon do not seem to have been distinguished by the ancient peoples, or
at least less so than the crocus and the colchicum (or 'meadow saffron').
Hence we found much earlier that kirke in Greek meant 'a hawk or falcon'.
In short, they are as interchangeable at the level of terminology as the 'L'
and the 'R' were interchangeable in Egyptian at the level of pronunciation
and symbol. It seems the Egyptians, like the Chinese of the present day
with their 'flied lice' for 'fried rice' had a paralamdism and inability to
differentiate the two liquid sounds.
Indeed, the 'L' could be differentiated further if our ears were so trained. It
is possible to pronounce a much more lingual and less dental 'L' than we
use in English. But as for the French 'r', I confess to being as unable to
form my tongue to pronounce that sound as Aristotle was, for instance,
unable to pronounce the Greek 'rho' - this being considered by the Greeks
to be a lisp.18
However, I have let myself digress. The subject of hawks and falcons can,
it seems, be pursued to a resolution. Seton Gordon, probably the world's
expert on the golden eagle, could not tell me a conclusive differentiation
between them. Nor could an experienced falconer friend. I was becoming
impatient at this lack of an answer until I learned from my friend Robin
Baring, who had once considered becoming an ornithologist, that an
extremely subtle difference between the hawk and the falcon does
actually exist.
It looks as if people have been trying to sort out hawks and falcons since
the Creation. But if the reader is as weary of these birds as the author, let
us agree to drop them and face the last few remaining Egyptian words. We
have survived a waterfall; can we muster the strength to pull ourselves to
shore?
Hensekti means 'hairy one' and also Isis and Nephthys. Nephthys could be
identified with Sirius B who is the archetypal 'hairy one', but it seems more
likely that Nephthys varied between being a name of Sirius B and being a
name of Sirius C, the female star which was also invisible. The henmemit
arc, tantalizingly, 'men and women of a bygone age'. The meaning 'to
plough' of and 'boundary' of hen-t are linked through 'arable land' of henb-
t in the word hen-b which means 'to delimit, to measure land, to make a
frontier boundary'. (This seems to connect the single 'n' words with the
double 'n' words after all.)
Just for final measure we note that Hen-b is also a serpent god of the Tuat
and Henb-Requ is a jackal-god, bringing us into liaison with the jackal/dog
Anubis and Sirius B's orbit and adding as a final flourish yet another pun
on serpent.
We recall that the throne and the oar were the two most common
allusions to the yearly 'steps' in the fifty-year orbit of Sirius B. Also the
name of the goddess Isis, which in Egyptian is Ast, means 'throne', and is
represented by the hieroglyph of a throne. Significantly, then, as-ti using
the same hieroglyph of the throne, means one in the place of another,
successor'. This is a specific reference to the sequentially of the thrones.
And the orbit which they represent, also known as Anubis, seems to be
given specific recognition by the combined form Ast Anpu, which is Isis-
Anubis.
Another name for Isis as Sirius specifically is Aakhu-t. In the light of this
new name it is not surprising to learn that Aakhuti is 'the god who
dwelleth in the horizon'. And aakhu-t sheta-t means 'the secret horizon'.
Aakhuti are 'the two spirits, i.e. Isis and Nephthys'. And the aakhu-t are
also 'the uraei on the royal crown', etc., demonstrating the origin of the
most central of the Pharaonic insigniae. Hence yet further demonstration
of the connection of the Sirius system with 'the secret horizon' of Sirius B's
orbit and its profound importance to the Egyptians.
Another form of the name of Isis, Ast, is Aas-t, which is seen as significant
if we note that aasten means 'one of the eight ape-gods of the company of
Thoth. He presided over the seven . . .'
For this is a parallel to the Sirius- linked story of the Dogon, whereby the
eighth chief presided over the previous seven chiefs as a means of
signifying the orbital period of Sirius B commencing again with the advent
of the eighth chief following the seven chiefs, each with a reign of seven
years giving seven times seven or forty-nine years. This Sirius concept is
here referred to in another form of the very name in Egyptian for Isis, who
was identified with Sirius.
It is specifically in her name of Aruru that she creates the hairy Enkidu,
companion to Gilgamesh. No doubt because Enkidu is related to Sirius B,
she appears in this name in the Epic of Gilgamesh because this particular
name is closely related to the Sirius lore, through its derivation from this
Egyptian form.
And the fact that Aar-ti is a common name of both Isis and Nephthys, and
Nephthys is more closely connected with the companion of Sirius, the
appellation Arum is closer to Sirius B, who is also represented by Enkidu,
than another name for the goddess Sirius which was not specifically
shared with Nephthys, the dark companion.
This word also means 'uraei' and we have just seen that the other word for
the uraei is related to the horizon of Sirius B's orbit, as well as also being
shared with Isis and Nephthys - obviously shared because the orbit
described by one is described around the other, and as we have seen
several times, the orbit was common to them both and divided their
respective precincts.
Therefore words connected with this orbit must be common to them both.
And what more appropriate name for the Sumerians to use for the
goddess in her role as creator of Enkidu, the dark companion of
Gilgamesh, than a name derived from this aspect of the goddess ?
Also sha-t means 'one hundred', and is the Egyptian synonym for the
Greek Hekate.
Another word for 'tooth' is abeh, and a related form of the same word
means 'jackal'. In addition aba means 'to make strong', and ab-t means
'path'. App means 'to traverse', and dp means 'steps'. If I may be forgiven
lack of grammar, app ab-t em ap means 'to traverse a path in steps',
which is exactly what Sirius B does in its orbit. Since Anubis has been
identified as the orbit of Sirius B, it is not surprising that a title of Anubis
was 'the counter of hearts' with 'the counter' being the word api and abu
meaning 'hearts'.
Herodotus, writing about 450 B.C., speaks of the Garamantes, that is the
people of the oasis of Djerma in the Fezzan (who in modern terms would
be accounted Tuareg), raiding the 'Ethiopians', i.e. black-skinned peoples,
across the Sahara in two-wheeled chariots each drawn by four horses.
About 400 years later, another great early geographer, Strabo, says much
the same of the Pharusii of the western Sahara, who may perhaps be
equated with ancestors of the Sanhaja. . . . The chariots of the
Garamantes and Pharusii were very light fighting vehicles, unsuitable for
carrying trade goods, but it is a point of considerable interest that
Herodotus's and Strabo's accounts of their activities have been confirmed
and given added point by the discovery on rocks in the Sahara of some
hundreds of crude drawings or engravings of two-wheeled vehicles each
drawn by four horses.
The most significant aspect of these drawings is that they are almost all
distributed along only two routes across the Sahara, a western one from
southern Morocco towards the Upper Niger, and a central one running
from the Fezzan to the eastern side of the Niger bend.
Herodotus was right in stating on the authority of the Egyptian priests that
the black dove and oracular oak cults of Zeus at Ammon in the Libyan
desert and of Zeus at Dodona were coeval. Professor Flinders Petrie
postulates a sacred league between Libya and the Greek mainland well
back into the third millennium B.C.
The Ammon oak was in the care of the tribe of Garamantes: the Greeks
knew of their ancestor Garamas as 'the first of men'. The Zetas of Ammon
was a sort of Hercules with a ram's head akin to ram-headed. Osiris, and
to Amen-Ra, the ram-headed Sun-god of Egyptian Thebes from where
Herodotus says that the black doves flew to Ammon and Dodona.
On the track which runs across the desert from Sebha, the modern capital
of the Fezzan, to the oasis of Ghat on the Algerian border, the traveller
crosses an underground water system that has few parallels for ingenuity
and effort in African history. . . . Seen from inside, the main tunnels are at
least ten feet high and twelve feet wide and have been hacked out of the
limestone rock by rough tools, with no attempt to smooth the surface of
the roof and walls. . . . How many of them actually remain is still not
certain, though hundreds of them are still visible.
In places they run less than twenty feet apart and their average length,
from the cliffs where they originate to the oases where they terminate, is
three miles. If we assume from the 230 that remain visible that there may
have been as many as 300 of them in this region of the desert, we have,
taking into account the lateral shafts, nearly 1,000 miles of tunnels hewn
out of the rock under the desert floor.
We are still not clear as to how the system worked. First, where is the
entrance to these tunnels ? One can spend hours trying to find their inlet,
and though the solution would seem easy at first, assuming that a
particular mound is followed along its entire length, the investigator finally
arrives at a jumble of rocks at the base of the escarpment without being
able to tell where the tunnel has disappeared to. ... (the system possibly)
presupposes an adequate and regular rainfall, in which case we have to go
back as far as 3000 B.C. to find such a maritime climate in the Sahara
Desert.
Could the foggaras be that old? . . . Wells are the only water sources in the
Wadi el Ajal today, and they are adequate for the present population of
some 7,000 people. If we compare this figure with the 100,000 or more
graves so far found in the Wadi and dating from the time of the 'people of
the water tunnels', we can get some idea of how populous this region
was.... In addition, the construction of such an enormous hydraulic
complex indicates an industrious and technologically advanced people
who had reached a stage of culture superior to that of northern Europe
before the Roman conquest.
Yet we know almost next to nothing about the Garamantes, and the
reason is obvious: with the fall of the Roman Empire, Africa became a 'lost'
continent, so much so that no European traveller reached even as far
south as the Fezzan until the beginning of the nineteenth century.
I should add that it was the Emperor Justinian who destroyed North African
civilization, before the Moslems came.
Wellard also says that in the Garamantian territory are myriads of tombs,
pyramids, fortresses, and abandoned cities lying untouched by any
archaeologist's spade.
'the fortress city of Sharaba which lies out there in the desert gradually
sinking beneath the sand. In the first place, perhaps not more than a few
score European travellers have visited the site in any case, as it lies off the
caravan routes in one of the more inaccessible pockets of the Mourzouk
Sand Sea. ... In point of fact, archaeological research in the country of the
Fezzan has only just begun. . . .'
After the Arab conquest of the Garamantian empire, the survivors fled
south-west and 'fused with the Negro aboriginals on the south bank of the
Upper Niger, and adopted their language', as Graves tells us in The Greek
Myths,23 and as he learned from the books of the anthropologist Eva
Meyrowitz.24
So that is some more light on how the Dogon and related Negro tribes of
the Upper Niger came to possess their amazing information. It is a tale of
thousands of years, and the drama was enacted across thousands of
miles, which only seems suitable considering the nature of the message
they were to carry into a much different world - the global village of
twentieth-century culture.
According to the Dogon, 'the shaper of the world' visited the earth and
returned to the Sirius system, having given men culture. Now that our
race has set foot on another heavenly body and we are looking outward to
our solar system, we are prepared to give serious consideration to any
neighbors who might be within a few light years of us and have solar
systems of their own which they inhabit and where they pursue their lives
with the same desire to know, to learn, to understand, and above all to
build a genuine ethical civilization, that motivates the best of us.
For if they are not so motivated it is doubtful that they will have survived
their own technologies. In love one can live, but without love there is no
world that will not poison itself. One must assume that any creatures living
at Sirius will have come to terms with a wholesome and vital ethic.
In ancient Egyptian, the hieroglyph and word for 'goddess' also means
'serpent'. The hieroglyph for Sirius also means 'tooth'. Hence 'serpent's
tooth' is a pun on 'the goddess Sirius'. In the Argo story, Jason sowed the
'serpent's teeth', an idea which must originally have stemmed from this
Egyptian pun. The Greek word for 'the rising of a star' also refers to 'the
growing of teeth from the gum'. Therefore when the serpent's teeth were
sown in the ground, they grew up from it as from a gum - that is, the star
Sirius ('serpent's tooth') rose over the horizon.
We find explanations of the words Argo, Ark, Argos, etc., by looking for
Egyptian origins. These words derive from the Egyptian word arq. But
related words in Greek give clues as well: Argus was a dog connected with
a cycle. Another Argus had one hundred eyes and watched over Io, who is
connected with the Sirius traditions and Isis. The Egyptian word arqi refers
to an end of a cycle, represented in the Odyssey by Argus. The Egyptian
word arq refers to a circular concept and is the origin of the Latin arcere
and of our arc.
A temple of Isis found in southern Italy has in its inner sanctum a painting
of hundred-eyed Argus (portrayed, however, with a normal face and eyes).
The mysteries of Isis were celebrated in this inner sanctum. Also the fifty
daughters of Danaos traditionally brought from Egypt to Greece (and
hence southern Italy) the mysteries of the Thesmophoria which according
to Plutarch were Isis mysteries. So we see Isis connected intimately at the
most secret and sacred levels with 'fifty' and 'one hundred' (Hekate) and
Isis was identified with Sirius.
The earliest Egyptians believed Sirius was the home of departed souls,
which the Dogon also believe. The Egyptians said that when a deceased
spirit 'went to Nephthys' he revolved 'in the horizon' and 'revolves like the
sun'. This is a pretty specific description of the dark Nephthys as a 'sun'
revolving around Sirius.
The Egyptians also maintained that emanations from the region of Sirius
vivified creatures on Earth. This, too, is believed by the Dogon.
Since the Egyptians believed Sirius was the other world of departed souls,
it is interesting that they called 'the other world arq-hehtt, using the
familiar word arq again.
The Egyptian word meaning 'fifty' (from which are derived the Arabic and
Hebrew words meaning 'fifty') referred to the fifty hot 'Dog Days' of Sirius
and also to 'a star that rests not' - obviously a moving star, namely Sirius
B with its fifty-year orbit.
Sirius in Egypt is 'the Bow Star'. The Egyptian word for 'bowman' refers
also to a heavy star metal connected with Anubis (which we have
previously suggested refers to the orbit of Sirius B, which is, after all,
made of 'heavy star metal'). The word for heavy star metal is similar to the
words for 'dwarf and 'weight'.
The Egyptian word for 'the beginning of a cycle' (which would join up with
arq meaning 'the end of a cycle') means also 'oracle' and 'the front and
hind tips of a ship' - a vindication of my oracle-Argo. The same word also
means 'the base of a triangle' (and the word for 'triangle' is a variation of
the name for Sirius, whose hieroglyph is a triangle). We also have geodetic
triangles, connected with the ark, from Thebes and Behdet.
In Egyptian the word for 'the secret horizon' also means 'the two spirits' -
namely, the light Isis and the dark Nephthys. The same word also means
'the god who dwelleth in the horizon' and 'Isis as Sirius'. The secret horizon
would seem to refer to the orbit of Sirius B in which Sirius B lives.
The Egyptian word for 'dog' also means 'tooth' (the triangle hieroglyph
meaning 'Sirius' and 'tooth'), and also means specifically 'dog-god' and
also 'one hundred'.
Another Egyptian word meaning 'tooth' means 'to traverse a path in steps'
and 'to make strong', and is used in connection with Anubis in such a way
that could be 'the counter of months while traversing the path'. A
synonym means 'one hundred' and 'Sirius'.
We thus have:
But Anubis who does this is 'a circle'. So we have: 'counting one hundred
months while traversing the circular Sirius path'. Change months to years
(as Moses might have done ?) and we have two fifty-year orbital periods of
Sirius B.
We see that the ancient Egyptians had the same Sirius tradition which we
have encountered from the Dogon tribe in Mali. We know that the Dogon
are cultural, and probably also physical, descendants of Lemnian Greeks
who claimed descent 'from the Argonauts', went to Libya, migrated
westwards as Garamantians (who were described by Herodotus), were
driven south, and after many, many centuries reached the River Niger in
Mali and intermarried with local Negroes.
The Dogon preserve as their most sacred mystery tradition one which was
brought from pre-dynastic Egypt by 'Danaos' to the Greeks who took it to
Libya and thence eventually to Mali, and which concerns 'the Sirius
mystery'. We have thus traced back to pre-dynastic Egypt well before
3000 B.C. the extraordinary knowledge of the system of the stars Sirius A,
Sirius B, and possible 'Sirius C possessed by the Dogon.
It is now:
'How did the pre-dynastic Egyptians before 3200 B.C. or their (unknown)
predecessors know these things?'
What is the answer to the Sirius question ? We do not know. But knowing
the right questions is essential to an eventual understanding of anything.
The many investigations which should properly follow upon the asking of
the Sirius question may give us more answers than we could at present
imagine.
But in considering the very origins of the elements of what we can call
human civilization on this planet, we should now take hilly into account
the possibility that primitive Stone Age men were handed civilization on a
platter by visiting extraterrestrial beings, who left traces behind them for
us to decipher. These traces concerned detailed information about the
system of the star Sirius which is only intelligible to a society as
technologically advanced as ours today.
Today was the time when we were meant to discover these coded facts, I
feel sure. Today is the time we should prepare ourselves to face the
inevitable reality that extraterrestrial civilizations exist, and are in all
probability far more advanced in culture than we ourselves - not to
mention in technology which could enable them to travel between the
stars!
A Fable
Once there was a little girl sitting by the seashore. Her mother had told
her to go and play. She watched the waves and thought: 'If only
something marvelous would happen to me today!' The sun was shining
very hot upon the strand and the girl became drowsy. The sound of the
quiet surf was like a lullaby. She began to doze.
Suddenly she awoke. The air was alive with a new coolness, a haze had
lifted, everything was startlingly clear to the sight. Far out, she glimpsed a
flash in the sea, then another flash, a glint of something in the sun. There
it was again - something coming towards the shore and making its way
through the waves. It must be a porpoise. The girl was terribly excited.
Something was happening to make her day memorable. Now she would
not have to sit by the seashore and be bored.
Now that the porpoise was getting nearer, it alarmed the girl. Could it be
about to crash against the sand, as she had heard giant whales did from
time to time in despair? Was it a dolphin actually intent on self-
destruction? The girl ran hurriedly towards the spot which seemed to be
the dolphin's objective. She saw its tail fin, quite close, appear for a
moment.
The poor dolphin had crashed into the sand. Full of pity, the girl began to
wade out towards it. But it moved away slightly. It wasn't stuck in the
sand. It was looking up at her from under the water. What could it be
trying to do? The girl went back to the shore. The fish now moved in closer
again. From quite near to the fish, a woman put her head above the water.
She had silver make-up on her face and eyes that went up.
The little girl was worried about the fish. 'Have you got hold of the
dolphin?' she asked the woman. Just beneath the woman's shoulders there
was a noise like a swimming suit strap snapping against her skin. She
replied to the girl with a fixed stare and a high wail which seemed to be a
song. She moved towards the girl, her eyes never straying from her. Her
eyes were clear blue, like the sky.
It was as if there were two holes in her head and you could see the sky
through them. Again her swimming suit strap snapped against her. Her
eyes were like the hot sun. The girl wanted to go to sleep. The woman's
eyes were like the sound of the surf. The girl sat down in the sand and
tried to make herself see the woman more clearly.
The woman's chest showed above the water now. Her bosom was bare.
Her swimming suit strap must have snapped. The woman's bosom was a
beautiful silvery green and shiny in the sun. The woman seemed unable to
go any farther.
She stared at the girl and remained motionless, except for a slight
swaying to and fro.
'Who are you?' asked the girl. 'Have you come from a boat?'
The woman gave a long wail, but the expression on her face did not
change. Then there was the snapping of the swimsuit again. But this time
the girl saw that above the woman's bosom were two long thin slits, which
had opened and snapped shut loudly as if they were muscles flexing, just
under her beautiful sleek collarbones. The woman stirred as if she were
resting uncomfortably on a high stool.
She looked dissatisfied and, twisting her torso, she leapt forward and fell
with a splash in the surf near where the girl sat. She had no legs. It was
what the girl had thought was the dolphin. The woman was a mermaid.
Her body stretched out long, sleek, shiny in the sun, with the surf rushing
up past her and then retreating. She leaned on an elbow and raised her
dolphin's tail slightly in the air, then tapped the shallow water, and did so
several times in the way that the girl herself tapped her fingers on her
desk at school sometimes.
The mermaid had no scales like an ordinary fish. Her skin was like that of
the dolphins in the aquarium who jumped through hoops. But she was
more silvery and more green. And there was a kind of hair streaming down
her back like thin seaweed, which looked brown, or silver, or green, or
grey, or even black. It was all those colors. And still the mermaid tapped
her tail against the surf and stared at the girl. She was very much like a
naked woman. She looked like the girl's mother did when she hurried to
put on her dressing-gown before a bath.
Once again there was the snapping noise, only quieter. The girl saw the
long thin slits in the woman's chest open and close instantly. Then the
woman made a low, pleasant humming sound and looked sleepy. She
leaned forward and an amazing series of clicks and pops were apparently
made by her in her throat, which the girl could see constricting and
moving.
The girl stood up and said to her, 'I've never seen a mermaid before. Can I
tell Mummy ?' The mermaid seemed to reply by smacking a fin against her
skin somewhere behind her, rocking, and making a long, loud hum. She
leaned forward more and looked at the girl and her eyes seemed to gloss
over and go green. She opened her mouth, little pointed teeth showed in
pink gums, and a long whispering sound came out which sounded like the
sea at a distance. She then beckoned the girl to her with her arm, and her
webbed fingers.
'You're so soft,' said the girl, 'not like fish are. I mean fish are soft, but
you're so smooth.'
The girl liked the mermaid. She had never seen anyone so smooth and
silvery and beautiful.
'I bet you can swim better than ordinary people. I'm going to run and tell
Mummy you're here!'
And she made every effort to smile and signal her intentions. The woman
seemed to nod in agreement. The girl ran quickly, looking back often to
see if her mermaid woman would wait for her. The mermaid made no
attempt to move, but merely watched the girl.
From a distance the mother could see something lying in the surf, as her
daughter tugged at her skirts excitedly.
Then suddenly the thing in the surf moved. It was horrible, like a serpent.
'Oh! It's alive! It's moving! No!' and she turned and tried to push her little
girl back home.
'I'm going to get Daddy. He'll know what to do. It may be a creature which
is injured. Now come with me.'
But the little girl eluded her and ran towards the sea.
Feeling sick in the pit of her stomach and apprehensive, the mother
followed her daughter and feebly called after her. The girl quickly reached
her friend from the sea, and the mother, seeing her standing beside the
moving creature, cried,
She then ran and — it was a woman and fish, it was! It was silver. It was a
mermaid!
Her daughter came to her obediently and the mother stared in disgust and
nausea at this awful slimy sea creature with a grotesque human frame
grafted on to it - a monster, an abomination. She felt her stomach
constrict, she gasped, she bent forward in the thought that she would be
sick.
'God!' she gasped. 'Go home! Go home!' and pushed her daughter
violently to make her run.
'What is it, Mummy?!' asked the girl, who was now becoming terrified.
Her mother was choking, eyes bulging, stumbling towards her with her flat
palm outstretched to push her away towards home.
'Mummy! Mummy!'
They heard a loud splash and turned just in time to see the mermaid slip
away effortlessly at lightning speed into the deep water gone instantly
from sight.
'Oh God!' said the mother, as she clasped her head and fell to her knees
on the sand.
'She's gone, Mummy. The mermaid's gone. But you saw her!'
The mother looked at her daughter as if the girl might at any moment
herself turn into a mermaid.
'Oh darling, what was it? Tell me it isn't true!' said the mother, and put her
head down into the hot, sharp sand.
A little story about a child and an adult and their different reactions to a
strange, intelligent amphibian. To the child 'it could swim better' and was
silvery and fascinating. To the mother it was repulsive and horrible.
In his work, Berossus describes his country's tradition of the origins of its
civilization. And the tale is a strange one. For a group of alien amphibious
beings were credited by the Babylonians with having founded their
civilization.
'there appeared another personage from the Erythraean sea like the
former, having the same complicated form between a fish and a man,
whose name was Odacon'.
With this in mind, I suddenly wondered what the word 'Annedotus', which
is never translated in the Cory translations of the fragments of Berossus,
could actually mean.
I read once again the fragment of Berossus from the careful Apollodorus
and scrutinized the translation of it, which was:
'. . .in whose time appeared the Musarus Oannes the Annedotus from the
Erythraean sea'.
The Erythraean sea is that body of water known to the ancients which we
today subdivide into the Red Sea, the Persian Gulf, and the Indian Ocean.
These are all reasons why I felt that I should include as an appendix to this
book the complete surviving fragments of Berossus (excluding a couple
unrelated to our concerns which may be found in the third and final, 1876
posthumous edition of Cory's book). For unless all of the material is
available and easy to hand, one invariably overlooks something and
neglects to make the frequent and necessary comparisons which enable
one gradually to read between the lines and obtain additional insights.
It so happens that the most frequently cited version of Berossus's account
is usually that preserved by Alexander Polyhistor.4 But that is where
problems can begin. For Alexander Polyhistor does not use the words
'annedotus' or 'musarus' in his account.
And the version preserved by Abydenus uses the word 'annedotus' only as
if it were a proper name:
'...in his time a semi-daemon called Annedolus, very like to Oannes, came
up a second time from the sea . . .'
Now the reader may appreciate why I wrote the little fable. For the
creatures credited with founding civilization in the Middle East were
frankly described by the Babylonians who revered them and built huge
statues of them (Plate 9) as being 'repulsive abominations'.
I once knew a girl who kept a pet boa-constrictor in her bedroom, next to
her bed for 'company'. She fed it a live mouse every Thursday and she
loved to watch it being eaten alive. She loved more than anything to hear
the snake at night in the dark when it made a curious slithering fall
against the side of its tank; this excited her greatly. Now, I do not wish to
criticize the girl for her strange tastes but I think most readers will agree
that the girl had somehow transformed the interest in a snake into
something else. And that kind of substitution is the promotion of a fantasy
which can probably be classed as pathological, though possibly not
dangerous to anyone (except the mice).
Indeed, when all other pleasures in life fail, the one remaining is a delight
in irony. I recommend it, both to men and Annedoti.
The whole body of the animal was like that of a fish; and had under a fish's
head another head, and also feet below, similar to those of a man,
subjoined to the fish's tail. His voice too, and language, was articulate and
human; and a representation of him is preserved even to this day. . . .
When the sun set, it was the custom of this Being to plunge again into the
sea, and abide all night in the deep; for he was amphibious.
Who was Berossus, and how reliable was he? It is best to quote Cory's own
preface for the information:
The first book of the history opens naturally enough with a description of
Babylonia. . . . The second book appears to have comprehended the
history of the ante-diluvian world; and in this the two first fragments ought
to have been inserted.
For it seems that the original of Berossus was lost long before the originals
of Abydenus, Apollodorus, Megasthenes, and Alexander Polyhistor. And
unless some obscure Byzantine monkish library or Egyptian papyrus of
Hellenistic date or Babylonian tablet produces new fragments, we may
never know more about Berossus than we do now at third hand. But at
least my Appendix II should be a help.
For it will be the first time since 1876 that the fragments of Berossus will
have been published.5
Let us take a look now at what the Dogon tribe have to tell us about the
amphibious creatures who are credited with founding their civilization as
well, and who seem to have come from Sirius. In Figures 32 and 34 are
Dogon tribal drawings of what the creatures actually looked like. They are
credited with having descended in an ark which, in landing, looked like
Figure 35 which portrays 'the spinning or whirling of the descent of the
ark'.
The god of the universe, Amma (whose name I feel certain is a survival of
that of the god Ammon of the Oasis of Siwa), sent the amphibians to
earth. They are called the Nommos. But just as the Babylonians tended to
speak of Oannes, the leader, instead of always saying 'the Annedoti'
collectively, the Dogon often just speak of 'Nommo' or 'the Nommo' as an
individual.
The Nommos are collectively called 'the Masters of the Water' and also
'the Instructors', or 'the Monitors'.
The Dogon describe the sound of the landing of the ark. They say the
'word' of Nommo was cast down by him in the four directions as he
descended,* and it sounded like the echoing of the four large stone blocks
being struck with stones by the children, according to special rhythms, in
a very small cave near Lake Debo.8
* The reader will recall that near the end of Chapter One I mentioned that
'the word' represents a concept like the logos to the Dogon, for it means
'air'. We may take this description to refer not only to noise but to a
rushing wind.
'The ark landed on the Fox's dry land and displaced a pile of dust raised by
the whirlwind it caused.' For this, see Figure 33. They continue: 'The
violence of the impact roughened the ground ... it skidded on the ground.'
The descriptions of the landing of the ark are extremely precise. The ark is
said to have landed on the earth to the north-east of Dogon country,7
which is where the Dogon claim to have come from (originally, before
going to Mande) and that is, of course, the direction of Egypt and the
Middle Hast in general.
The latter is much like the Babylonian tradition of their god Ea (Enki to the
Sumerians), whose seat was also in the water, and who is sometimes
connected with Oannes.
'He is like a flame that went out when he touched the earth'.
They say:
For the principle of the rocket is a simple one unlikely to be dispensed with
entirely in any foreseeable future technology.
Actually, the Dogon seem to make a clear differentiation between the ark
in which the Nommos actually landed on earth and what we may surmise
was the true interstellar spaceship hovering above in the sky at a great
distance, and which the Dogon seem to describe as appearing in the sky
as a new star, and leaving with the Nommos at their departure from Earth.
At this point I should make it clear that I do not believe that spaceships
from extraterrestrial civilizations are flitting through the skies at this
moment. I am not a 'flying saucer' enthusiast. I do not believe that
spacecraft would behave in the erratic fashion in which UFOs behave. It
makes no sense to me that spacecraft would fly idly around making
spectacles of themselves - and ambiguous spectacles at that - for years on
end.
I have encountered nothing but flak from both sides about this believers in
flying saucers are incredulous that I am not one of them, since I have
written a book on extraterrestrials and I even maintain that spaceships
visited Earth in the past; those who do not entertain for one moment the
notion that spaceships could ever have visited the Earth naturally assume
that my book is about flying saucers.
I should add, however, that I feel certain that the Earth is being monitored
at this moment by a more advanced extraterrestrial civilization, and I
assume this monitoring must be by automatic computer probes left behind
in this solar system at some time in the past.
The Dogon may describe the interstellar spaceship hovering high above
the Earth by what they call ie pelu tolo, 'star of the tenth moon'. The
Dogon say: 'As (the ark) landed, the weight of the ark caused the "blood"
to spurt to the sky'.12
This would seem to be a rocket craft landing on earth. But this 'spurting
blood' (flame ?) is said to be shared with ie pelu tolo, and 'gave the star
reality and brilliance'.13
For three different complementary tribal drawings ie pelu tolo, see Figure
37. These seem to represent the 'star' in three separate conditions,
differing in the amount of 'spurting blood' being emitted by the presumed
spacecraft. The Dogon also describe this 'star' specifically as having a
circle of reddish rays around it, and this circle of rays is 'like a spot
spreading' but remaining the same size.14
It is said that the Nommos will come again. There will be a 'resurrection of
the Nommo'.
It should thus not surprise us that,
'the celestial symbol of the resurrection is the "star of the tenth moon", ie
pelu tolo . . . This star is not easy to see. . . . The ten rays, placed in pairs,
are inside the circle because the star has not yet "emerged"; it will be
formed when the Nommo's ark descends, for it is also the resurrected
Nommo's "eye" symbolically.'15
In other words, the 'star' is not a star, and can only be seen when the
Nommo returns and his ark descends to Earth.
The Nommo is 'the monitor for the universe, the "father" of mankind,
guardian of its spiritual principles, dispenser of rain and master of the
water generally.'16
Not all the Nommos came to Earth. The 'one' called Nommo Die, or 'Great
Nommo', remained 'in heaven with Amma, and he is his vicar'.17
The Nommos who came to earth in the spaceship arc presumably of this
class. Figures 3a and 34 represent these beings in particular.
'He will be sacrificed for the purification and reorganization of the universe
... He will rise in human form and descend on Earth, in an ark, with the
ancestors of men . . . then he will take on his original form, will rule from
the waters and will give birth to many descendants.'21
'The Nommo divided his body among men to feed them; that is why it is
also said that as the universe "had drunk of his body" the Nommo also
made men drink. He also gave all his life principles to human beings.'23
He was crucified on a kilena tree which also died and was resurrected.24
After the ark had landed, according to the Dogon, an interesting series of
events took place which make a great deal of sense if one remembers that
amphibious creatures were inside. Something described both as a 'horse'
and just simply as a 'quadruped' appeared which pulled the ark with ropes
to a hollow.25
The hollow then filled with water. However, an untoward incident then
occurred:
'After the first rainfall, when the water had filled the pond, the water-
insect . . . entered the water ... it wanted to "bite" the Nommo's head . . .
but it was unable to reach the edge of the ark.'27
'The great ark came out of the sky and came down. In the centre the
Nommo was standing, he came down. Then he returned to the water.' ...
Thus we see that the second and third categories of Nommo are really the
same, but represent successive states. And as for the future:
His twin who will descend later on with the Blacksmith, 'twin of the victim',
will also be transformed in the pond. They will have many descendants
and will always be present in the fresh 'male' water of the brooks, rivers,
ponds and wells and also in the 'female' sea water.29
As for this reference to fresh water as male and sea water as female, it is
similar to the ancient Babylonian and Sumerian tradition where Apsu
(Abzu) was a male fresh-water deity and Tiamat a female sea-water deity.
The Dogon say,30 'O Nommo has his seat in the waters of the earth',
which could just as well be a description of Enki/Ea, whom I mentioned
above.
I feel impelled to reproduce in this book as Figure 38 a Dogon drawing
showing four variants of the Dogon sirigi mask design. Anyone can see
that they look like rocket ships. Griaule and Dieterlen give31 detailed
accounts of the meanings of the lozenges, rectangles, etc. These variant
designs are said specifically all to represent 'the descent and impact of the
ark'.32
The descent of the ark was like a lozenge, its impact was like a
rectangle.33 Perhaps this is why the Dogon say:
'When the ark was descending, space was four angles; when the ark was
down, space had four sides.'34 The sirigi design itself represents 'a "house
with stories" . . . (and) indicates the ark as well as its descent.'35
The Dogon say36 that 'lpo tolo (Sirius B) and Sirius were once where the
sun now is'. That seems as good a way as any to describe coming to our
solar system from the Sirius system, and leaving those stars for our star,
the sun. But let us now take leave of our friends the Dogon. Let us go to
where Sirius and its white dwarf companion star are the suns, and where
our own sun has become just another star in the sky.
Sirius A, a big, bright star, has two and a half times the mass of our sun.
Sirius B has ninety-five per cent of the mass of our sun, but because it is
made of degenerate matter and is so tiny, this is not obvious. If Sirius B
with its mass were not a white dwarf, we could easily see it from earth as
a star of magnitude 2, though the problem of parallax would make it
difficult to separate it from Sirius A. In any case, if Sirius B were on its own
somewhere at its distance from earth, and were not a white dwarf, it
would be one of the brightest stars in the sky.
Our planet will probably be quite hot. In fact, it will probably even be
covered with a vaporous layer of cloud at most or all times. It might look
something like Venus from a distance, though of course Venus does not
have temperatures or clouds of the sort which living creatures are likely to
find agreeable. It would seem important to keep cool on this probably
rather hot and steamy planet.
They would probably spend a lot of time hanging about marshes and
might have developed an indigenous way of life originally which involved
the use of woven reeds for huts and transport, and so on. (They would
long ago have got past that stage, of course.)
But perhaps their first style of life, to which they may even look back with
some nostalgia as 'the good old days of simplicity and a carefree
existence', was something like that described by Wilfred Thesiger in his
book The Marsh Arabs 37 in which the inhabitants of southern Iraq are
pictured in the marshes of the lower Tigris and Euphrates (quite near
where Oannes and his friends are said to have spent most of the time, one
is tempted to note!).
If you were one of these creatures, you would be a good deal like a
dolphin with arms and hands. You would, due to your amphibian nature,
have a separate blowhole for breathing in addition to your mouth. You
would be able to hold your breath for long periods, and when you did
breathe through your blowhole, it would be a gasp and make a bit of
noise.
Your blowhole would open and close almost instantaneously and your
breathing would tend to be infrequent but loud and quick. The blowhole
might be placed in such a way that it consisted of one or of two small slits,
long and thin, just beneath your clavicles (collarbones). In fact, the Dogon
have a tradition that their Nommos breathed through their clavicles.38
You could not go about bare-skinned in any atmosphere for long. You
would require moisture on your skin after a few hours at the most; when
your skin dried you would be in absolute agony - worse than a human with
sunburn.
Because you would frequent the surface of the water a great deal, there
would inevitably be a considerable contrast between the top half of your
body and the bottom half.
As one of these creatures, you might find human beings repulsive, for
many reasons. Their rough hair, dry skins, bony limbs, and particularly
their pungent smells might disturb you greatly. Their sweat is not
continually washed away in the way that your skin is continually cleansed
by the watery medium which you inhabit.
And as an amphibian you have exceedingly well developed senses of smell
and taste. You 'taste' smells or spoor-substances underwater at enormous
distances and though your sense of smell is not quite as acute, it is
competent enough. Unlike yourself, human beings tend to have areas in or
near their dwellings which smell of their excrement and urine - places to
which they habitually return to perform these functions.
When humans stand still with their legs together, they look almost normal.
But then suddenly they 'split' into two and begin walking, which makes
you slightly dizzy and upsets you. It makes you feel nervous with the
thought of how dreadful it would be for you if you 'split' and thereby
became a cripple in the water. You admire the agility of the humans on
dry land.
They can climb trees and cliffs, all of which is terribly impressive. They can
go at a great speed on land with what they call 'running', they even have a
certain capacity to jump over obstacles; they are not as swift on land as
you are in water, but they do passably well. You do have difficulty in
seeing them sometimes because, as you are in a watery environment,
your vision is not good at long range.
And the humans, being dry, do not stand out against their background as
much as you could wish. When they move you can instantly detect motion
without optical definition, but a stationary human who is even
approximately camouflaged and blends with this background is impossible
for you to differentiate with your unaided eye. You rely on your sense of
smell, like a rhinoceros.
But when the wind is against you, you have no hope. A human can easily
elude your perception on dry land if he knows what he is doing and you do
not have your goggles or technical aids with you.
The climate range of your planet is greater even than the Earth's because
there are no ice caps, due to there being more radiation from the two or
three stars in your multi-solar system. Your oceans are all the more
extensive, therefore, for not being locked up in ice caps at the poles.
Space flight is less uncomfortable for you than for humans, as the state of
weightlessness is often approximated under water (indeed, on Earth the
astronauts train under water). Your blood circulation is thus better suited
to the weightless condition than is the case with humans and you do not
at all mind living in the gigantic water tanks orbiting your planet which
constitute your many satellite space cities. It is not as difficult to simulate
a watery environment in space as it is to simulate a dry land environment.
Your wants are few, your existence simple. You do not eat cooked food
and you do not have stoves to keep warm. Farming for you is mostly the
breeding of delicious small fish, and meals are an adventure as you love a
good chase and the satisfaction of catching your food. Dinner is a family
sport.
The amphibians must have a name, and the Dogon name for them of 'the
Monitors' may be the best to consider using. 'Monitor' is more specific
than 'Instructor', and 'Masters of the Water' is too long. There is no point
using the euphemism the 'Annedoti', knowing that it means the 'Repulsive
Ones'.
A more generic and neutral term, I suppose, would be simply the 'Sirians'.
If we ever come into contact with them again, they will probably be called
the 'Sirians' officially, and their civilization will be the 'Sirian civilization'.
Their art will fall under the heading of 'Sirian culture' and their technology
will be 'Sirian technology'. But what about their religion? There's a delicate
point.
It will be called the 'Sirian religion' and we will try to pretend it has nothing
to do with us. But inevitably we will have to take into account that,
whereas 'cultures' and 'technologies' can be localized, the greater
problems of the nature of life itself and of an individual's relation to the
universe - existential problems - are not localizable.
There will in fact be no such ultimate thing as 'Sirian religion' except in the
ethnographic sense. To speak of a 'Sirian' God will get us into deep waters.
What do we mean when we speak of a 'Jewish' God or a 'Christian' God?
There is no doubt that it is at the level of our deepest concerns - our
religious and philosophical ones - that contact with an extraterrestrial
civilization will make its deepest impact on us.
'. . . stories like the Oannes legend . . . deserve much more critical studies
than have been performed heretofore.'39
When this book was accepted for publication, the managing director of the
publishing company asked me to his office for our first meeting. He had
personally decided to accept the book and he had himself read it.
My answer was:
The information in this book cannot really rest with publication. I hope that
many people will take an interest in exploring the ramifications of what I
have here presented. This process has already begun, some months
before publication. Portions or versions of this book have been read by a
number of people already, nearly all of whom have made valuable
comments on the material.
With a subject like this which is new, fresh insights are possible from
almost anyone. The least educated person might have the most profound
thought on some aspect of this question. But primarily it is from the highly
qualified professionals that progress should come. Astronomers in
particular must deal with this material. Fortunately, they are an open-
minded community, perhaps due to the open-ended nature of the universe
which it is their job to study.
My reaction is:
The special interest of Egyptians and others in Sirius is well known and
you have made a strong case (as I think the people you quote have done)
for supposing that the Dogon interest in Sirius is connected with this.
In spite of all this, if you will allow me to say so, I think your investigations
are fascinating and they make an exciting book.
Your work does appear to bring out more strongly than ever the
impression that, as you say, ancient cultures did not develop gradually. I
do not know whether this impression is significant, but it bears
investigation. I cannot see how it could have anything to do with space
travelers. But you may think it right to argue the case.
I may add that I realize that some of the matters about which you write
may have been mysteries of religion, and so it may be hopeless to expect
anything more explicit than what you describe. Also, as you say, there
seems to have been a liking for puns. So it could be that the revelations by
the Dogon tell us what has been left secret for 6,000 years. . . . To some
extent, I am being advocatus diaboli so that maybe I am letting you see
the sort of thing you will be up against when your work is published.
A great many of the criticisms which I have not quoted were dealt with in
the complete rewrite of the book which took place after Professor McCrea
and others had kindly blasted me with specific points. I was less fortunate
in obtaining such comments from authorities on the ancient world.
On the whole it is the astronomical community who have shown the most
interest in this matter, for it is they who are directly concerned with such a
subject. And no astronomer has contributed a more detailed appraisal of
the actual Dogon accounts than Dr Irving W. Lindenblad of the U.S. Naval
Observatory in Washington, who in a letter to me dated 14 June 1974,
made these comments:
I agree that one should think twice before disagreeing with the Dogon.
From an astronomical viewpoint, however, there are difficulties with the
Dogon's suggestion of a third Sirius component having a period of 32 or 50
yrs., yet having a 'greater trajectory'. Kepler's third law states that the
squares of the orbital periods are proportional to the cubes of the orbital
semi-major axes. Thus, a 'greater trajectory' must be accompanied by a
greater period.
Among the numerous observed triple systems of stars circling a common
center of gravity, it has been found that the third member always has a
much greater distance and period than the other two components.
Celestial mechanics illuminates this phenomenon by demonstrating that a
triple system is unstable if the two secondary stars are nearly equidistant
from the system's center of gravity.
The Dogon must have realized that the orbital radii of Digitaria and emme
ya could not remain at right angles with one another unless the periods
were the same. If he did, this would constitute an argument in favor of
accepting the tradition assigning a 50 yr. period to emme ya, as opposed
to the tradition assigning a period of 32 years.
'Regarding your orbital diagrams of Sirius, my work would not affect them
at all. The changes I have been dealing with involve very minute
quantities which can be detected only in large telescopes and even with
such instruments a great amount of observation is required.'
Dr Lindenblad had not read this book prior to going to press, although he
did read the Griaule and Dieterlen account of the Dogon Sirius system and
see the diagrams. As for Professor McCrea, he had discovered quite in
dependency of my own work that the Dogon knew of the existence of an
invisible companion star to Sirius. He was informed of this by a friend in
Argentina who had read a French account, which mentioned Griaule and
Dieterlen's work.
(Indeed, I received a great deal of it after the book was written and
therefore I had to rewrite the book to incorporate it. The new material all
served to strengthen rather than weaken my thesis.)
Figure 40.
Dr Su-Shu Huang's diagram for possible orbits of habitable planet in binary
star system.
A and B are stars. The curves with different values for C are suggested
orbits, one of which is a figure- eight configuration.
In considering the material set forth in this book, I hope that serious
scholars will bear in mind that the existence of amphibious beings with
high intelligence and advanced civilization is not a previously unheard of
idea.
Considering this larger potential size, the great variety of life, the good
stable environment of the oceans, and the competition among species,
one is at first tempted to assume that the majority of intelligent extrasolar
life would be marine. . . . Fins, ideal for ocean locomotion, are not well
suited to developing tools (and thereby brains).
And it makes it difficult to say whether some intelligent extrasolar life may
be marine rather than land dwelling. . . .
Another possibility is some form of marine life having fins and two short
arms with large hands and webbed fingers.
For the hypothetical star could penetrate the Sirius B plane of motion in a
vast range of places without disrupting Sirius B's orbit, as long as the
perpendicularity of the two planes of motion was retained. A 50-year or
32-year elliptical orbit for Sirius C, therefore, in a plane perpendicular to
that of Sirius B's orbit is entirely possible. These multiple star motions
involve such complicated celestial mechanics that the necessary
computations are well beyond the competence of most professional
astronomers.
As I remarked in Chapter One and now I mention again, it may well be that
Sirius C follows a figure-eight orbit around both Sirius A and Sirius B
alternately. Perhaps its total orbital period is 50 years and its larger loop
period is 32 years. It may orbit in a plane which is at right angles to the
plane of Sirius B's orbit. It would genuinely be a 'greater trajectory'
because its figure-eight would encompass both of the other stars, but its
actual distance and time would still obey Kepler's third law and would not
exceed those of Sirius B with the same period.
They have picked up our radio signals. They know we have been to the
moon. Let us assume they wish us well. Let us assume even that they
contact us someday when they think we are ready for it - or after we have
discovered them by examining the Sirius system as I suggest and finding
evidences of their existence.
Let us assume all this. Well, if that day comes - or if it doesn't and if some
other day comes, some other civilization some day is known to us at some
other star - there is one thing we must not forget. We must remember that
no matter how grand and glorious they may be, they are still mortal
beings in a universe which to them is still mysterious. They cannot and
never will know all the answers.
We may very well have a handful of answers that they have not. We may
have some quirky skills which they cannot attain. We may have some
peculiar native ingenuity which they lack, even if this is not obvious for
centuries. There may be something about us that is so valuable that we
are not just worthless primitives beside them. Let us never accept a view
of ourselves as recipients of cosmic charity. We are men, and for all our
faults, we have a few things about us which are worth some attention. We
have had some remarkable characters in our history and we will have
more.
And if we ever find ourselves oppressed, let us be certain that there are
others somewhere - who would free us. The universe is finite but
unbounded. There are between ten and a hundred million intelligent
civilizations in our galaxy alone, in all likelihood. And there is always one
more to contact than the one we have already contacted.
We can afford to shop around in a shop the size of the universe.
APPENDIX I
The Moons of the Planets, the Planets around Stars, and Revolutions and
Rotations of Bodies in Space
' . . In each of the planetary spheres there are invisible stars which revolve
together with their spheres . . .'
The non-specialist reader will never have heard of Proclus, one of the
greatest intellects in the history of philosophy, who lived from a.d. 410 to
485. The only easily available English translation of this Greek
philosopher's gigantic output is his Elements of Theology 1 (which is not
relevant to what we are to consider here). But the persistent inquirer may
obtain his Commentary on Euclid2 and his Commentary on the First
Alcibiades of Plato3 in English (the former from America, the latter from
Holland).
And from Liechtenstein one may now obtain in English the end of the
seventh book of his Commentary on the Parmenides of Plato.4
What the persistent inquirer will likely not be told by any compendium of
information on the subject is that most of the works of Proclus were
translated into English by Thomas Taylor at the turn of the eighteenth and
nineteenth centuries in England and are to be found in a handful of
libraries (though even the British Museum has a far from complete
collection of Taylor's life's work).
To the lovers of the wisdom of the Greeks, any remains of the writings of
Proclus will always be invaluable, as he was a man who, for the variety of
his powers, the beauty of his diction, the magnificence of his conceptions,
and his luminous development of the abstruse dogmas of the ancients, is
unrivalled among the disciples of Plato.
There are many classical scholars who like to imply that the 'Golden Age'
of Greece was the only significant era in Greek philosophy. Within this
period one can conveniently place Socrates, Plato, Aristotle, Euripides,
Sophocles, Aeschylus, Demosthenes, and the historians Herodotus,
Thucydides, and Xenophon.
These brilliant names tend to blind one into accepting the false notion that
Greece at any other period in its history was merely second rate in the
intellects it produced. Many scholars arc passionately dedicated to
deriding any Greek intellects either before or after this 'Golden Age'.
Some caustic comments have been made about this by other scholars,
and there is no denying the tendency to ignore or belittle - even to
suppress and deny - Greeks who preceded or followed the glorious 'Golden
Greeks' who are most familiar to us. It certainly is an embarrassing fact,
then, for certain classical scholars to have to face, that the Platonic
Academy continued to function in Athens for over nine hundred years.
At the time when (the Emperor) Justinian closed its doors, (the Academy)
might have celebrated its 916th anniversary. . . . the Academy changed
considerably in the course of centuries; it is only the Old Academy that
may be considered as Plato's Academy, and it lasted a century and a half
or less.
To this one might reply that every institution is bound to change with the
vicissitudes of time and that the longer it lives the more it must be
expected to change. Bearing these remarks in mind, we may put it this
way: the Academy of Athens, the Academy founded by Plato, lasted more
than nine centuries.
Those who find chronology difficult to comprehend without analogies
might wish to ponder this: the duration of the Platonic Academy
(apparently on the same site) in Athens was equivalent to the duration to
date on English soil of Westminster Abbey; or, the 916 years of life of the
Academy as a philosophical institution was equal to the amount of time
which will have elapsed from the Norman Conquest of Britain in 1066 to
the year 1982. (And even after the dismemberment, the Academy
continued 'in exile' in Persia, etc.)
We thus see that Plato's Academy existed longer on one spot than Britain
has existed since William the Conqueror.
The Platonic tradition in the broader sense, with its gnostic and heretical
overtones and its myriad manifestations in later ages in such bizarre and
fascinating figures as Giordano Bruno, Marsilio Ficino, John Dee, and even
Sir Philip Sidney and the Earl of Leicester - not to mention the troubadours
of Provence, Dante in Italy, and the massacred tens of thousands of
Albigensians in France, the Knights Templar, and an infinite range of
hopeless causes over two and a half millennia, is an agonizing and
impossible problem for the orthodox mind, whatever its creed.
For Platonism in the general sense is a creed which denies creed, an anti-
institutional tradition known to those who adhere to it as the 'Great
Tradition'. It resembles the Society of Friends (Quakers) in insisting on
nothing by way of doctrinal dogma. It is truly free, it has no membership,
no tithes, no rules which are enforced; it has no Pope, no Caliph. It terrifies
those weaker mentalities which crave a structured belief-system; they
always try to destroy it, but succeed only in destroying individuals and
individual 'movements' within the larger tradition.
These indeed are problems. And they go some way to explain why the
reader hears nothing of a great many subjects which have a direct
relevance to the matter. One of the many such subjects is Proclus. No one
dares to discuss what Proclus really stood for and what he represents
beyond his own specific ideas. Even to raise the subject of a figure such as
Proclus is to bring the skeleton from the closet and rattle it with a
vengeance.
Proclus does not even rate his own entry in the Penguin Companion to
Literature, vol. 4, which deals with classical literature. He is mentioned
under an entry for Neoplatonism by D. R. Dudley:
Notice the phrase 'possible in that age', implying as it does that no person
today would even consider trying to know something about so many
subjects in our age of perverse over-specialization. Proclus, we are told,
'was a strange combination'. Dudley tells us nothing of what Proclus
wrote, nothing of his ideas, nothing of the immense bulk of his writings,
and in his bibliography refers us only to the harmless and difficult
Elements of Theology. We are left to conclude that Proclus was an extinct
species like the dodo, interesting only because he was 'a strange
combination possible in that age'.
There are very few historians dealing with the fifth century a.d. We
assume from what Dudley says that only they could be interested in a
'strange combination possible in that age'. Surely Proclus, of whom we are
told nothing of importance, is totally unimportant. Would the Penguin
Companion mislead its readers? Such a thing is unthinkable.
Professor A. C. Lloyd of the University of Liverpool was given the task of
discussing Proclus as part of his contribution to the Cambridge History of
Later Greek and Early Mediaeval Philosophy,6 a compendium which did
not exist before 1967 and which was reprinted with corrections in 1970.
The publication of this large volume of 715 pages marked the attainment
of a stage in classical scholarship where many scholars were officially
agreeing that they were running out of things to do in the more usual
areas and had better begin compiling guidelines for a study of the long-
neglected subject of the above-mentioned book.
Such lonely figures as Richard Walzer, Philip Merlan, and the late I. P.
Sheldon-Williams, long engaged in these arcane pursuits out of pure
interest, were summoned to help delineate the bounds within which a new
generation of students might have some new fields in which to do their
Ph.D. theses and where some original work remains to be done by the
professors who have now tidied up the Pre-Socratic field rather well and
need new ground for some genuine problem-solving.
His studies at the Platonic Academy there are then described, and it was
this School of which he was to become the Head:
'It is not known when he took over the School, but he remained at its head
till he died in 485. He never married and his only defects were a jealous
nature and a short temper.'
His short temper seems to have extended to impatience with those who
were slow to understand what he was saying or who made irritating
difficulties over petty details. For instance, he begins his mammoth work
Commentary on the Timaeus of Plato with this extraordinarily testy
sentence:
'That the design of the Platonic Timaeus embraces the whole of physiology
and that it pertains to the theory of the universe, discussing this from the
beginning to the end, appears to me to be clearly evident to those who
are not entirely illiterate.'
It is now that we begin to consider the connection which Proclus has with
the larger subject of our book. We will continue with Professor Lloyd's
description of Proclus:
Proclus believed that his metaphysics was the true though hidden
meaning of Plato and that this like all Greek 'theology' derived from the
secret doctrines of Pythagoreans and Orphics. It can be studied in two
works, the Elements of Theology and the Theology of Plato, with help here
and there from the commentaries on the Parmenides, Timaeus, and
Alcibiades.
In Chapter One Simplicius speaks of 'those who pretend that our opinions
and desires, and generally speaking, all of our choices and intentions, are
necessary and not at our own disposal, but come from exterior causes
outside ourselves, not coming from us of our own volition.' He attacks the
'Behaviourists' of his day in clear and forceful terms which are not
restricted in relevance to his own times by any means.
In his entire treatment of Proclus, Lloyd gives only slight and cursory
reference to the In Tim. However, it is to the In Tim. which we must now
turn. Since page references to the Greek text of Lipsiae would be useless
to most readers, I give page references to Taylor's English translation,
vols. I and II.
The fact that he entertained this view in relation to the mystery religions is
shown in his remarks about Pythagoric principles in In Tim., Book V (II,
312):
'But these are the Orphic traditions. For what Orpheus delivered mystically
through arcane narrations, this Pythagoras learned, being initiated by
Aglaophemus in the mystic wisdom which Orpheus derived from his
mother Calliope.'
These bodies are the moons of the planets and the planets of other stars.
Furthermore, Proclus seems to have an incredibly enlightened view of
celestial phenomena in many other ways as well.
In Book III of In Tim. Proclus says (I, 425) that the Moon is made of
celestial earth. Or why else does the moon, being illuminated, produce a
shadow, and why does not the solar light pervade through the whole of it ?
... we shall find that fire and earth subsist also analogously in the heavens;
fire indeed, defining the essence of them, but each of the other elements
being consubsistent with it.
We know from other citations above that the theory of the moon being
celestial earth' is a 'Pythagoric-Orphic' one which Proclus has adopted. The
fact that he here extends the observation to the remarks of the general
nature of the celestial bodies implies that those ideas conic from the same
source. The heavens are indeed of a 'fiery mode', for we now know
scientifically that stars possess all the normal chemical elements in a fiery
mode.
In Book IV of the In Tim. (II, 293), Proclus ridicules epicycles and says they
are valuable as 'an excellent contrivance' by which to analyze and
comprehend the true simple motions of the stars,
We thus see that Proclus, despite his late date, is no prisoner of the
Ptolemaic theory of the universe. Ptolemy lived three hundred years
before him, but Proclus was a hold-out against his epicycles, preferring the
views expressed above.
In fact, Proclus views the spheres in a way which is extremely surprising,
for in Book IV of In Tim. (p. 273) he says:
'Thus also the planets are moved with an advancing motion, but not the
spheres of the planets'.
This is quite a clear statement that the planets move while their 'spheres'
or - dare we say it ? - orbits are really the spaces in which this movement
takes place. However, we need not be too cautious here. Benjamin Jowett
uses the word 'orbit' in his translation of the text of Plato (38-39) on which
Proclus is here commenting. There is no reason why we should refrain
from doing the same.
Plato's text may be interpreted in the same way, but it is not customary to
do so, and it is too vague by far.
The different spheres in which the seven 'planets', Moon, Sun, Venus,
Mercury, Mars, Jupiter, and Saturn, were set, revolved with different
uniform velocities such as would represent the observed movements of
those bodies.
This is purely an interpretation of a vague text. One could just as well say
that Plato maintained that the spheres did not move and the planets in
them were what moved, as Proclus specifically states (and as he seems to
think Plato believed).
Near the very end of Book IV of In Tim. (pp. 293 ff.) Proclus says:
With respect to the stars, however, those that are fixed, revolve about
their own centers. . . . But the planets revolve in conjunction with the
inerratic sphere, and each is moved together with its sphere to the east,
and revolves by itself according to breadth and depth, and about its
proper centre.
It is worth while for us to examine these remarks of his closely. First of all,
the 'in-erratic sphere' of the fixed stars revolves around the Earth and the
planets do the same in conjunction with it. That is the simplest of the
motions.
But on top of that are several more motions: first, the fixed stars rotate on
their axes in a spin rotation; second, the planets do the same; third, the
planets do more than that: each planet 'by itself (i.e. in separate motion
from all the other stars and planets as well as separate from the 'spheres')
'revolves according to breadth and depth', which obviously refers to
'becoming by itself more remote from and nearer to the earth', as seen
from the previous quote.
And this depth of planetary motion, which Proclus here specifically calls
'according to breadth and depth' literally adds a new dimension to any
theory of planetary motion. For whereas anyone who observes the sky
over long periods can see that the planets appear to get dimmer and
brighter as if they were 'becoming more remote from and nearer to the
earth', the formal description of planets operating in terms of a dimension
at right angles to their apparent revolutions comes very close indeed to
pointing to a central point of their revolutions which is something other
than the Earth.
There was a tradition that Plato came to believe this, which was publicly
proposed by Aristarchus of Samos and partially advocated by Plato's friend
Heraclides of Pontus.
In short - that the Earth revolves around some other centre such as the
sun.
Thus does Proclus admit the controversy and come down on the side of
caution concerning revolution about the sun.
'And (the Creator) gave to each of (the stars) two movements: the first, a
movement on the same spot after the same manner . . . the second, a
forward movement . . .'
This is an obscure way of saying the stars rotate and the sky circles. (If
Plato inserted someone else's treatise into his dialogue without being fully
au fait with the material - as has been maintained - it may explain the
vagueness, though Plato does no better in the Laws and was a feeble
astronomer.)
In the same passage as above, Plato also clearly describes the following:
'The earth, which is our nurse, circling around the pole which is extended
through the universe', which refers to the rotation of the earth itself on its
axis.
Proclus apparently adds of his own volition the other motions - for Plato
seems only to mention two. Furthermore, Plato's text is too brief and
foggy to make it clear exactly what he did mean. The one thing of which
we can be certain is that Proclus expended untold tens of thousands of
words expounding Plato's meanings in all fields beyond the extent to
which Plato himself managed or desired to do. On some subjects this is
not particularly gripping. But with this particular subject, every scrap of
evidence is essential to unravelling the intended significance of Plato's
statements.
What means Timaeus [see Plato's Timaeus, 42D] when he says that souls
are dispersed into the earth, the moon, and into other instruments of
time ? Does the earth move like the sun, moon, and five planets, which for
their motions he calls organs or instruments of time ? Or is the earth fixed
to the axis of the universe; yet not so built as to remain immovable, but to
turn and wheel about, as Aristarchus and Seleucus have shown since;
Aristarchus only supposing it, Seleucus positively asserting it ?
Theophrastus writes how that Plato, when he grew old repented him that
he had placed the earth in the middle of the universe, which was not its
place.
(Plutarch then follows with his own opinion, which is that the earth does
not move.)
'We know of only one [astronomer] who adopted the system [of
Aristarchus] a century later, Seleucus of Seleucia, an Oriental Greek from
the Persian Gulf.'
However, Plato's views on the earth's position in space are less interesting
to us in themselves than as they relate to Proclus's interpretation of them,
and also as they relate to modern historians of science, who tend to gloss
over the possibility that Plato may have adopted a heliocentric theory of a
rotating earth moving round the sun, which was obscurely expressed in
the Timaeus and less tentatively adhered to by Plato 'when he grew old',
bearing in mind that the Timaeus itself is no early work of Plato's.
There is clear proof that Proclus did not himself originate the third motion
at right angles to revolution which we have seen that Plato does not
mention. We actually find it referred to by Plutarch in his dialogue 'Of the
Face Appearing in the Orb of the Moon'.24
There he says:
Nor is the moon indeed moved by one motion only, but is, as they were
wont to call her, Trivia, or Three-Wayed - performing her course together
according to length, breadth, and depth in the Zodiac; the first of which
motions mathematicians call a direct revolution, the second volutation, or
an oblique winding and wheeling in and out; and the third (I know not why)
an inequality; although they see that she has no motion uniform, settled,
and certain, in all her circuits and reversions.
Plutarch's expressions 'mathematicians call' and 'as they were wont to call
her' make clear that he is referring to some unidentified and now lost
astronomical works. Plutarch's exposition is not as clear as we could wish,
and in a succeeding passage is countered by another speaker who
espouses the more fashionable theory of spheres which actually
themselves move while, as for the moon: 'some supposing that she herself
stirs not'.
We must not stray too far from Proclus. In pursuit of him, however, I wish
to mention his influence on Johannes Kepler, the sixteenth-century
discoverer of the three laws of planetary motion (which are the only ones
we possess even now). And in this I have another complaint to make. For
not one major work of Kepler's has ever been translated into English.13
This fact is enough to send one into despair. Who wants to plough through
a lot of medieval Latin to read Kepler - and who can ? But what has Kepler
to do with Proclus ? Well, Kepler was steeped - indeed, drenched - in
Proclus. The interested reader may turn to the closing pages of Harmonies
of the World in the Encyclopaedia Brittanica vol. 16, Ptolemy, Copernicus,
and Kepler 14, and read for himself.
He will find there remarks about Proclus, after which Kepler says:
'But also I have recently fallen upon the hymn of Proclus the Platonic
philosopher, of whom there has been much mention in the preceding
books, which was composed to the Sun and filled full with venerable
mysteries' in the context of speculation about 'what did the ancient
Pythagoreans in Aristotle mean, who used to call the centre of the world
(which they referred to as the "fire" but understood by that the sun) "the
watchtower of Jupiter"?'
Here we see that Kepler, the great forerunner of Newton, was delighted
with the 'venerable mysteries' of Proclus.
In the light of what we know now and will shortly discover further, later in
this appendix, about Proclus's theories, what effect did they have on
Kepler's own thinking?
Was Proclus standing behind Kepler just as Aristarchus stood behind
Copernicus?
When will Kepler and Proclus be fully available in English so that any
intelligent person can make up his own mind without first becoming fluent
in often highly technical medieval Latin?
And the corollary of this is: If so, are the possibilities of our making pertain
breakthroughs being stymied by the very suppression of the sources
which may have engendered the earliest breakthroughs ?
By cutting off the root of Kepler, can we really expect the branch to
continue to flower?
If the facts about Proclus's theories which are being presented in this
appendix really have gone unremarked by all the leading historians of
science upon whom we all usually rely to tell us at second hand all the
facts which we feel we have no time to discover at first hand, then
something is clearly wrong with the system. We have got to overhaul the
mechanics. Otherwise we shall continue to spiral downwards and think we
are rising.
Also there arc 'their occultations under the sun, and their evolutions into
light...'
It is not an easy thing to know what Proclus is referring to. His sudden
dropping of this large but obscure hint cannot be meant to be understood
by everyone - not even those 'who are not entirely illiterate', as he testily
warned us in the very first sentence of his huge tome. This particular work
by Proclus is extremely difficult to read, and the Thomas Taylor translation
has neither any index nor any form of table of contents by which to locate
subjects, names or references in the text.
The Lipsiae Greek text has an index, but there is no means of correlating it
with the Taylor translation, which has no textual numbering.
As Aristotle, however, inquires why the sphere of the fixed stars, being
one, comprehends many stars, but in each of the planetary spheres, which
are many, there is only one star, the solution of this conformably to his
own opinion may be obtained from his writings. But we have already said
something concerning this, and now agreeably to what has been before
asserted, we say, that each of the planets is a whole world,
comprehending in itself many divine genera invisible to us.
Of all these however, the visible star has the government . . . in each of
the (planetary spheres) there are invisible stars, which revolve together
with their spheres; so that in each, there is both the wholeness, and a
leader which is allotted an exempt transcendency. . . . each of the spheres
is a world; theologists also teaching us these things when they say that
there are Gods in each prior to daemons, some of which are under the
government of other. . . . from all which it is evident that each of the
planets is truly said to be the leader of many Gods, who give completion
to its peculiar circulation.
'There are, however, other divine animals following the circulations of the
planets, the leaders of which are the seven planets.'
'And these, as we have before observed, are what the moderns call
satellites'.
(For) each of these spheres ... as we have already explained, it follows that
every planet has a number of satellites surrounding it, analogous to the
choir of fixed stars; and that every sphere is full of gods, angels, and
daemons, subsisting according to the properties of the spheres in which
they reside. This theory indeed is the grand key to the theology of the
ancients, as it shews us at one view why the same god is so often
celebrated with the names of other gods; which led Macrobius formerly to
think that all the gods were nothing more than the different powers of the
sun; and has induced the superficial, index-groping moderns to frame
hypotheses concerning the ancient theology, so ridiculous that they
deserve to be considered in no other light than the ravings of a madman,
or the undisciplined conceptions of a child.
But that the reader may be convinced of this, let him attend to the
following extraordinary passages from the divine commentaries of Proclus
on the Timaeus. And in the first place, that every planet is attended with a
great number of satellites, is evident from the following citation:
'There are other divine animals attending upon the circulations of the
planets, the leaders of which are the seven planets; and these revolve and
return in their circulations in conjunction with their leaders, just as the
fixed stars are governed by the circulation of the inerratic sphere.' [p. 279]
...
And in the same place he informs us, that the revolution of these satellites
is similar to that of the planets which they attend; and this, he acquaints
us a little before, is according to Plato a spiral revolution . . . (and) 'about
every planet there is a number (of satellites) . . . all of them subsisting
with proper circulations of their own' [p. 275].
The reader should note that Thomas Taylor describes this knowledge as
'the grand key to the theology of the ancients'. We know from a fragment
of Damascius16 the Neoplatonist that,
'the Egyptian philosophers, who are resident among us, have explained
their occult truth, having obtained it from certain Egyptian discourses.
According to them, then, it appears to be this. The One principle of the
Universe is celebrated as Unknown Darkness, and this three times
pronounced as such . . .'
But wherever the information came from, the fact is that Proclus and his
Neoplatonic colleagues believed the ultimate secrets of religion concerned
two things: the invisible 'Dark' and invisible circulations of certain
heavenly bodies, some of which were non-esoteric enough even to be
specified, namely the satellites of our planetary system. Proclus winds up
a dissertation on the source of this knowledge from 'sacred rumor' which
concerns 'invisible circulations' also on page 247 of In Tim., II.
Since Proclus specifically describes here and in the passage from In Tim. II,
281, the orbits of the heavenly bodies as their 'circulations' (Taylor's
choice of English), the 'invisible circulations' which he mentioned must be
invisible orbits of heavenly bodies, and he also tells us that there are
invisible heavenly bodies. So ... what invisible orbitings of invisible
heavenly bodies are so important that they can, as Proclus just told us,
'enable us to commence the contemplation of celestial bodies' and vice
versa ?
Is that not a most curious thought? How can he possibly mean that there
are invisible orbitings so important that they may be set against the
visible orbitings for importance, the one complementing the other even to
the very base of our abilities to contemplate the heavens ?
The key to the paragraph from Proclus II, 281, is the expression in it:
For in those words Proclus firmly identifies these ideas with a theological
as opposed to philosophical tradition, and hence one connected with one
or more of his mystery religions. This is just the evidence we need. For it is
these mystery religions which we know contained the essence of the Sirius
mystery as their secret doctrine. And also, as we have seen earlier,
Proclus sought to interpret Plato in terms of an esoteric tradition with
which Proclus himself was connected directly, as an initiate.
Can we then conclude that Proclus may be one further person with
knowledge of the Sirius mystery?
Proclus is more specific about his planetary moons elsewhere. In his work
the Platonic Theology, Chapter XIV of Book VII (Vol. II, pages 140-1 of
Taylor's translation), we read:
But the planets are called the Governors of the world (cosmocrators), and
are allotted a total power. As the inerratic sphere too has a number of
starry animals, so each of the planets is the leader of a multitude of
animals, or of certain other things of this kind. In each of the planetary
spheres, therefore, there is a number of satellites analogous to the choir
of the fixed stars, subsisting with proper circulations of their own.
The revolution also of these satellites is similar to that of the planets which
they follow: and this according to Plato is a spiral revolution. With respect,
likewise, to these satellites, the first in order about every planet are Gods;
after these daemons revolve in lucid orbicular bodies; and these are
followed by partial souls such as ours.
'For "the natures successive" to the stars, are evidently their satellites,
which have more than once been mentioned by Proclus.' 5
On the same page a second footnote adds:
'From what is here said by Proclus, it appears that the fixed stars, as well
as the planets, have satellites, and that the stars which sometimes are
visible, and at other times disappear, are of this description.'
And it is even more curious that the 'missing' words quoted by Proclus are:
kai ta toutois ephexes of which Taylor says:
'These words, however, are not to be found in the text of Plato, but form a
remarkable addition to it'.
Since Proclus was head of the Academy, he may be assumed to have had
a reliable copy of Plato's text in the Academy library. If he did not have a
reliable copy of Plato's text in Plato's own Academy, what did he have a
reliable text of? Hence these words must be entertained as a possibly
correct version and should probably be added to the currently accepted
text by classical scholars. The meaning of the words is translated by
Taylor as: 'the natures successive' - that is successive to the stars.
'For the natures successive to the stars, are evidently their satellites,
which have more than once been mentioned by Proclus'.
The fact that a reference to the satellites of stars was dropped from the
orthodox text of Plato should come as no real surprise to us. What scribe
could fathom the meaning? In copying the manuscripts over the centuries,
then creep in corruptions. A reference to satellites of stars would have
been too shocking, considered too bizarre.
Nothing that seemed staid and settled has been able to remain in its
mould. Even Plato's solid text begins to quiver like a live jelly. From out of
so many ossified subjects have crept mysterious little creatures, which
have done disrespectful dances on their premises, indicating that these
subjects do not want to lie down and be declared dead. They are living.
Inside them glow sylphs and secrets. We cannot force them to turn to
stone.
It seems clear that the abandoned four words of text were probably
dropped in order to avoid the enormous consequences which must follow
upon their being retained: that Plato himself, though not particularly well
acquainted with astronomy in an active professional sense, had
apparently some links to a tradition which, by being esoteric, seemed to
make no sense at all outside a secret 'mystery' context. This is true
whether Plato wrote the passages himself or inserted the Pythagorean
treatise which has been proposed (see later).
Plato's dialogue Timaeus is without doubt the most difficult and bizarre of
the unquestioned Platonic writings (the Epinomis is more bizarre, but
seems to have been written by Plato's disciple Philip of Opus).
Let us examine a few remarks concerning this strange work, taken from
George Sarton (op. cit.):
'There is more Oriental lore in the Timaios than Greek wisdom' (p. 423,
note).
'The astrologic nonsense that has done so much harm in the Western
world and is still poisoning weak-minded people today was derived from
the Timaios, and Plato's astrology was itself an offshoot of the Babylonian
one. In justice to Plato it must be added that his own astrology remained
serene and spiritual and did not degenerate into petty fortune telling' (p.
421).
'The influence of the Timaios upon later times was enormous and
essentially evil' (p. 423.).
'Many scholars were deceived into accepting the fantasies of that book as
gospel truths. That delusion hindered the progress of science; and the
Timaios has remained to this day a source of obscurity and superstition'
(p. 430).
Those are strong words. The Timaeus (the more commonly used spelling
in English) obviously arouses violent reactions in some! Here we see
Sarton, one of the most distinguished and respected historians of science
who ever lived, raving hysterically that the 'evil' Timaeus is responsible for
'hindering the progress of science'.
Sarton's views of Plato in general are incredibly violent and hostile, though
many of his criticisms of Plato are quite valid and reasonable If it were not
for the purple prose. It is certainly true that there were many faults to
Plato's theories, particularly his political ones which Aristotle rightly found
so repulsive, and these rouse Sarton to a fury surpassing his slurs on the
poor Timaeus. But this is common among expert scholars. They have to
restrain themselves most of the time for purposes of professional poise
and 'objective treatment'. But the mask can fracture and a raw nerve
protrude.
But as for the perplexity or ire which the Timaeus seems alternatively to
arouse in so many of those who attempt to study it, we should realize that
the tradition is probably true which says that the major portion of the
dialogue, which consists of a lengthy speech by the character named
Timaeus on the nature of the universe, is really not written by Plato, but
was inserted by him as the words of an apparently imaginary character (or
a disguised one).
For many ancient sources maintained that this part of the dialogue was in
reality a Pythagorean treatise which Plato obtained during one of his visits
to Sicily. Rather than see the treatise disappear into obscurity, Plato is
said to have entered it as the contribution of a character in a dialogue,
using the discussion of the other characters as a means of setting it off to
proper advantage. And it is this supposed Pythagorean treatise which
contains all the material of interest to us in connection with the Sirius
mystery.
I owe it to the reader to display the evidence that the passage in the
Timaeus which is of such concern to us, and on which Proclus's
commentary is based as it concerns the heavenly bodies, was not even
written by Plato.
I therefore quote from Book VIII, 85, of the Lives of Eminent Philosophers
by Diogenes Laertius (the Loeb Library translation):
Philolaus of Groton was a Pythagorean, and it was from him that Plato
requests Dion to buy the Pythagorean treatises. . . . His doctrine is that all
things are brought about by necessity and in harmonious inter-relation. He
was the first to declare that the earth moves in a circle (round the central
fire), though some say it was Hicetas of Syracuse.
He wrote one book, and it was this work which, according to Hermippus,
some writer said that Plato the philosopher, when he went to Sicily to
Dionysius's court, bought from Philolaus's relatives for the sum of forty
Alexandrine minas of silver [an 'equivalent value', for this was before
Alexander], from which also the Timaeus was transcribed. Others say that
Plato received it as a present for having procured from Dionysius the
release of a young disciple of Philolaus who had been cast into prison.
In line with this tradition that the treatise embodied into the Platonic
Timaeus was of Pythagorean origin - and presumably from thence derived
itself from Egypt and Chaldaea (Babylonia) - we may read the following
interesting remarks of Proclus from In Tim. Book IV (II, 273):
For he may have known its secrets and made use of the principles of that
secret tradition through the indirect means of his more general writings -
by hinting broadly at 'invisible orbits' without specifying all of them, and
insisting on their importance without giving any really satisfactory
reasons. He seems to have been trying to get the principles across without
breaking sacred vows against the revealing of the specifics of the case.
As he was extremely religious, we know from his character that he would
honor such vows. But as he was passionately devoted to making known
the general principles of the universe, he would have done exactly what it
seems he did do - tell us the story without giving the names of the
characters.
But, of course, the historians of science have not yet got around to
noticing this inconvenient little thing. Nor have they bothered to let us
know much about Johannes Scotus Eriugena (otherwise known as John the
Scot or Erigena, which is a misspelling) of the ninth century a.d., who
promulgated the theories of Macrobius and Martianus Capella at the court
of Charles the Bald, and wrote a mammoth philosophical work titled
Periphyseon of half a million words.
SUMMARY
The planets become 'more remote from and nearer to the earth' in their
revolutions.
The heavens contain all the four elements in varying proportions but tend
to do so according to a 'fiery mode'. The 'fire' in the stars is different from
earthly fire and is more properly 'energy'. (Earthly fire is a dark and
debased form of true fire, or as Proclus expresses it: 'the dregs and
sediment of fire'.)
Proclus was initiated into the Egyptian and Babylonian mysteries and
would thus have known about the Sirius mystery.
Notes
Notes
Griaule and Dieterlen, Le Renard Pale, op. cit., p. 44: 'The establishment of
categories, of classifications, of correspondences, constitutes an armature
comparable to the framework of a construction, to the articulated bone
structure of a body. What imparts life to them gives them their own
physiology - is, for the Dogon, their relationship with God and with the
order in the world he created, that is to say, with the way the universe was
organized and functions today.
'It is the myth that lights up the whole. Structures appear progressively in
time and are superimposed, each one with its own special meaning, also
with its own interrelations which are narrowly connected. That is what
lends meaning to the succession of categories and stages of classification,
which give evidence of the relationships established between man and
what is not of man in the universe.'
What is so odd about the Chinese inability to distinguish the two liquids is
that they have both of them more or less in their own languages. For the
'L' is quite common and a sound rather close to an V is used in words
which we commonly transcribe by a 'J', such as in the word jen, which is
pronounced almost like 'run' in English and is the Confucian term for
virtue.
APPENDIX II
The Surviving Fragments of Berossus, in English Translation
Note: The following fragments are published here for the first time since
1876 in order to make them readily available to the reader.
Regrettably, the original Greek text is not here included, but may be found
in I.P. Cory, The Ancient Fragments .
Then reigned Euedoreschus from Pantibiblon, for the term of eighteen sari;
in his days there appeared another personage from the Erythraean sea
like the former, having the same complicated form between a fish and a
man, whose name was Odacon. (All these, says Apollodorus, related
particularly and circumstantially whatever Oannes had informed them of:
concerning these Abydenus has made no mention.)
It is said that the first king of the country was Alorus, who gave out a
report that he was appointed by God to be the Shepherd of the people: he
reigned ten sari: now a sarus is esteemed to be three thousand six
hundred years; a neros six hundred; and a sossus sixty.
After him Alaparus reigned three sari: to him succeeded Amillarus from
the city of Pantibiblon, who reigned thirteen sari; in his time a
semidaemon called Annedotus, very like to Oannes, came up a second
time from the sea; after him Ammenon reigned twelve sari, who was of
the city of Pantibiblon: then Megalarus of the same place eighteen sari:
then Daos, the shepherd, governed for the space often sari; he was of
Pantibiblon; in his time four double- shaped personages came out of the
sea to land, whose names were Euedocus, Eneugamus, Eneuboulus, and
Anementus: after these things was Anodaphus, in the time of
Euedoreschus.
There were afterwards other kings, and last of all Sisithrus: so that in the
whole, the number amounted to ten kings, and the term of their reigns to
an hundred and twenty sari. (And among other things not irrelative to the
subject, he continues thus concerning the deluge:) After Euedoreschus
some others reigned, and then Sisithrus.
To him the deity Cronus foretold that on the fifteenth day of the month
Desius there would be a deluge, and commanded him to deposit all the
writings whatever that he had, in the city of the Sun in Sippara. Sisithrus,
when he had complied with these commands, instantly sailed to Armenia,
and was immediately inspired by God. During the prevalence of the waters
Sisithrus sent out birds, that he might judge if the flood had subsided. But
the birds passing over an unbounded sea, and not finding any place of
rest, returned again to Sisithrus.
This he repeated. And when upon the third trial he succeeded, for they
then returned with their feet stained with mud, the gods translated him
from among men. With respect to the vessel, which yet remains in
Armenia, it is a custom of the inhabitants to form bracelets and amulets of
its wood.
Of the Tower of Babel They say that the first inhabitants of the earth,
glorying in their own strength and size, and despising the gods, undertook
to raise a tower whose top should reach the sky, where Babylon now
stands: but when it approached the heaven, the winds assisted the gods,
and overturned the work upon its contrivers: and its ruins are said to be at
Babylon: and the gods introduced a diversity of tongues among men who
till that time had all spoken the same language: and a war arose between
Cronus and Titan: but the place in which they built the tower is now called
Babylon, on account of the confusion of the tongues; for confusion is by
the Hebrews called Babel.
- Euseb. Praep. Evan. lib. 9. - Syncel. Chron. 44. - Euseb. Chron. 13.
In the first year there made its appearance, from a part of the Erythraean
sea which bordered upon Babylonia, an animal endowed with reason, who
was called Oannes. (According to the account of Apollodorus) the whole
body of the animal was like that of a fish; and had under a fish's head
another
head, and also feet below, similar to those of a man, subjoined to the fish's
tail. His voice too, and language, was articulate and human; and a
representation of him is preserved even to this day.
This Being in the day-time used to converse with men; but took no food at
that season; and he gave them an insight into letters and sciences, and
every kind of art. He taught them to construct houses, to found temples,
to compile laws, and explained to them the principles of geometrical
knowledge. He made them distinguish the seeds of the earth, and showed
them how to collect fruits; in short, he instructed them in every thing
which could tend to soften manners and humanize mankind. From that
time, so universal were his instructions, nothing has been added material
by way of improvement. When the sun set, it was the custom of this Being
to plunge again into the sea, and abide all night in the deep; for he was
amphibious.
After this there appeared other animals like Oannes, of which Berossus
promises to give an account when he comes to the history of the kings.
'There was a time in which there was nothing but darkness and an abyss
of waters, wherein resided most hideous beings, which were produced of a
twofold principle. Men appeared with two wings, some with four and with
two faces. They had one body but two heads; the one of a man, the other
of a woman. They were likewise in their several organs both male and
female. Other human figures were to be seen with the legs and horns of
goats.
Some had horses' feet; others had the limbs of a horse behind, but before
were fashioned like men, resembling hippocentaurs. Bulls likewise bred
there with the heads of men; and dogs with fourfold bodies, and the tails
of fishes. Also horses with the heads of dogs: men too and other animals,
with the heads and bodies of horses and the tails of fishes. In short, there
were creatures with the limbs of every species of animals.
'The person, who was supposed to have presided over them, was a woman
named Omoroca; which in the Ghaldaic language is Thalatth; which the
Greeks express Thalassa, the sea: but according to the most true
computation, it is equivalent to Selene, the moon. All things being in this
situation, Belus came, and cut the woman asunder: and out of one half of
her he formed the earth, and of the other half the heavens; and at the
same time destroyed the animals in the abyss. All this (he says) was an
allegorical description of nature.
For the whole universe consisting of moisture, and animals being
continually generated therein; the deity (Belus) above-mentioned cut off
his own head: upon which the other gods mixed the blood, as it gushed
out, with the earth; and from thence men were formed. On this account it
is that they are rational, and partake of divine knowledge. This Belus,
whom men call Dis, divided the darkness, and separated the Heavens
from the Earth, and reduced the universe to order. But the animals so
lately created, not being able to bear the prevalence of light, died.
Belus upon this, seeing a vast space quite uninhabited, though by nature
very fruitful, ordered one of the gods to take off his head; and when it was
taken off, they were to mix the blood with the soil of the earth; and from
thence to form other men and animals, which should be capable of
bearing the light. Belus also formed the stars, and the sun, and the moon,
together with the five planets.'
In the second book was the history of the ten kings of the Chaldeans, and
the periods of each reign, which consisted collectively of an hundred and
twenty sari, or four hundred and thirty-two thousand years; reaching to
the time of the Deluge.
After the death of Ardates, his son Xisuthrus succeeded, and reigned
eighteen sari. In his time happened the great Deluge; the history of which
is given in this manner. The Deity, Cronus, appeared to him in a vision,
and gave him notice that upon the fifteenth day of the month Daesius
there would be a flood, by which mankind would be destroyed.
Having asked the Deity, whither he was to sail? he was answered, 'To the
Gods:' upon which he offered up a prayer for the good of mankind. And he
obeyed the divine admonition: and built a vessel five stadia in length, and
two in breadth. Into this he put every thing which he had got ready; and
last of all conveyed into it his wife, children, and friends.
After the flood had been upon the earth, and was in time abated,
Xisuthrus sent out some birds from the vessel; which not finding any food,
nor any place to rest their feet, returned to him again. After an interval of
some days, he sent them forth a second time; and they now returned with
their feet tinged with mud. He made a trial a third time with these birds;
but they returned to him no more; from whence he formed a judgment,
that the surface of the earth was now above the waters.
Having therefore made an opening in the vessel, and finding upon looking
out, that the vessel was driven to the side of a mountain, he immediately
quitted it, being attended by his wife, his daughter, and the pilot.
To this he added that he would have them make the best of their way to
Babylonia, and search for the writings at Sippara, which were to be made
known to all mankind: and that the place where they then were was the
land of Armenia. The remainder having heard these words, offered
sacrifices to the gods; and taking a circuit, journeyed towards Babylonia.
The vessel being thus stranded in Armenia, some part of it yet remains in
the Corcyraean * mountains in Armenia; and the people scrape off the
bitumen, with which it had been outwardly coated, and make use of it by
way of an alexipharmic and amulet. In this manner they returned to
Babylon; and having found the writings at Sippara, they set about building
cities, and ereciing temples: and Babylon was thus inhabited again.
After the deluge, in the tenth generation, was a certain man among the
Chaldaeans renowned for his justice and great exploits, and for his skill in
the celestial sciences.
Of Nabonasar
From the reign of Nabonasar only are the Chaldaeans (from whom the
Greek mathematicians copy) accurately acquainted with the heavenly
motions: for Nabonasar collected all the mementos of the kings prior to
himself, and destroyed them, that the enumeration of the Chaldaean kings
might commence with him.
(He then says, that) this Babylonian king conquered Egypt, and Syria, and
Phoenicia and Arabia, and exceeded in his exploits all that had reigned
before him in Babylon and Chaldaea.
Of Nebuchadnezzar
Some of these walls he built of burnt brick and bitumen, and some of brick
only. When he had thus admirably fortified the city with walls, and had
magnificently adorned the gates, he added also a new palace to those in
which his forefathers had dwelt, adjoining them, but exceeding them in
height, and in its great splendor. It would perhaps require too long a
narration, if any one were to describe it: however, as prodigiously large
and magnificent as it was, it was finished in fifteen days. In this palace he
erected very high walks, supported by stone pillars; and by planting what
was called a pensile paradise, and replenishing it with all sorts of trees, he
rendered the prospect an exact resemblance of a mountainous country.
This he did to please his queen, because she had been brought up in
Media, and was fond of a mountainous situation.
Upon his death Neriglissoorus, who had conspired against him, succeeded
him in the kingdom, and reigned four years.
After his death, the conspirators assembled, and by common consent put
the crown upon the head of Nabonnedus, a man of Babylon, and one of
the leaders of that insurrection. In his reign it was that the walls of the city
of Babylon were curiously built with burnt brick and bitumen.
But in the seventeenth year of his reign, Cyrus came out of Persia with a
great army, and having conquered all the rest of Asia, he came hastily to
Babylonia. When Nabonnedus perceived he was advancing to attack him,
he assembled his forces and opposed him, but was defeated, and fled with
a few of his attendants, and was shut up in the city Borsippus.
Whereupon Cyrus took Babylon, and gave orders that the outer walls
should be demolished, because the city had proved very troublesome to
him, and difficult to take. He then marched to Borsippus, to besiege
Nabonnedus; but as Nabonnedus delivered himself into his hands without
holding out the place, he was at first kindly treated by Cyrus, who gave
him an habitation in Carmania, but sent him out of Babylonia. Accordingly
Nabonnedus spent the remainder of his time in that country, and there
died.
-Joseph, contr. App. lib. 1. c. 20. - Euseb. Praep. Evan. lib. 10.
Berossus, in the first book of his Babylonian history, says; That in the
eleventh month, called Loos, is celebrated in Babylon the feast of Sacea
for five days; in which it is the custom that the masters should obey their
domestics, one of whom is led round the house, clothed in a royal
garment, and him they call Zoganes.
Of Nebuchadnezzar
Before he should thus betray my subjects, Oh! that some sea or whirlpool
might receive him, and his memory be blotted out for ever; or that he
might be cast out to wander through some desert, where there are neither
cities nor the trace of men, a solitary exile among rocks and caverns,
where beasts and birds alone abide. But for me, before he shall have
conceived these mischiefs in his mind, a happier end will be provided.'
When he had thus prophesied, he expired: and was succeeded by his son
Evilmaluruchus, who was slain by his kinsman Neriglisares: and
Neriglisares left Labassoarascus his son: and when he also had suffered
death by violence, they made Nabannidochus king, being no relation to
the royal family; and in his reign Cyrus took Babylon, and granted him a
principality in Carmania.
That God, however, has not cared for the Hebrews only, but rather that in
His love for all nations He hath bestowed on the Hebrews nothing worth
very serious attention, whereas He has given us far greater and superior
gifts, consider from what will follow. The Egyptians, counting up of their
own race the names of not a few sages, can also say they have had many
who have followed in the steps of Hermes. I mean of the Third Hermes
who used to come down to them in Egypt.
The Chaldaeans also can tell of the disciples of Oannes and of Belus; and
the Greeks of tens of thousands who have the Wisdom from Cheirion. For
it is from him that they derived their initiation into the mysteries of nature,
and their knowledge of divine things; so that indeed in comparison the
Hebrews seem only to give themselves airs about their own attainments.
Out of a great egg whence his name, and that he was actually a man, but
only seemed a fish because he was clothed in 'the skin of a sea creature'.
Fragment of Helladius
PRESERVED BY PHOTIUS
(C. A.D. 82O-C. 893)
PRESERVED IN THE FORM OF A SUMMARY (Codex 279)
Back to Contents
APPENDIX III
Why Sixty Years?
The Sigui ceremony of the Dogon is celebrated every sixty years. What
precedents for such a period of time, given religious importance, are to be
found in the ancient world?
The Egyptians had such a period associated with Osiris.1 We also find the
sixty-year period reduplicated by them in a manner familiar from the
reduplications of the fifty-year period of Sirius B, and also in the Dogon
custom of speaking of 'uniting two Sigui':
'The henti period consisted of two periods, each containing sixty years.'
'. . . most terrible is his name of "Asar" (Osiris). The duration of his
existence is an eternal henti period in his name of "Un-Nefer".'
The henti period may, by pun, have had some association with the phallus,
henn. I only suggest this because of the connection of circumcision with
the Sigui ceremonies of the Dogon. It is pure speculation. Henti is also a
title of Osiris, presumably arising from the fact that the duration of Osiris's
existence is said to be 'an eternal henti period'.
Sixty years is the great period which brings into synchronization the
movements of the two great outer planets which can be seen by the eye. I
have no doubt that this sixty-year period has been of considerable
importance in ancient times, and the sharp-eyed Egyptians would have
been well aware of it.
'That of Jupiter ... is effected in twelve years. And . . . that of Saturn ... is
completed in thirty years. The stars, therefore, are not conjoined with
each other in their revolutions except rarely. Thus, for instance, the
sphere of Saturn and the sphere of Jupiter are conjoined with each other in
their revolutions, in sixty years.
For if the sphere of Jupiter comes from the same to the same in twelve
years, but that of Saturn in thirty years, it is evident that when Jupiter has
made five, Saturn will have made two revolutions: for twice thirty is sixty,
and so likewise is twelve times five; so that their revolutions will be
conjoined in sixty years. Souls, therefore, are punished for such like
periods.'
'For in order that the measures and revolutions of times might be known,
and that the convolutions of the world might be visible, the light of the sun
was enkindled; and vice versa, the opacity of night was invented, in order
that animals might obtain the rest which they naturally desire.
Month likewise was produced, when the moon, having completed the
revolution of her orb, returns to the same place from whence she
departed. And the spaces of the year were terminated when the sun had
passed through the four vicissitudes of the seasons, and arrived at the
same sign.
This esoteric cycle conjoining the motions of Saturn and Jupiter would
have seemed of immense importance to all ancient astronomers who had
a good grasp of their subject. A cycle of sixty years is so long that no
single person can live long enough to verify its recurrence a second time.
The knowledge of such a cycle required a continuing tradition of
observation which implies a priesthood with astronomical inclinations.
Apart from the fact that no one lives 120 years very easily, and thus
'uniting two Sigui' is accepted as having celebrated two Sigui ceremonies
in a lifetime, the reduplication of the cycle may be taken to signify that
only by checking to see if it happens a second time can the cycle be
verified.
To unite two of the cycles is to achieve a henti, which we have just seen
the Egyptians describe both as 120 years and as 'eternal'. How can 120
years be 'eternity'? This can be so when eternity is seen to consist of a
cyclical construction. In other words, eternity is not a straight line to
infinity but is rather an endless series of coils of the same size compressed
into a great spring, known as time, and with the impetus of happening.
Then we read:
'. . . (this) outer circle is the oriental cycle of Vrihaspati, 6o'.6
'the number 60 is the base of the famous cycle called the Saros of 3,600
years of the Chaldees or Culdees of Babylon . . .' and he mentions also
that it is the decimal part of the 600-year cycle of the Neros period from
the ancient Near East. But as for the 'famous Indian cycle of Vrihaspati', he
seems upset that Indian brahmans explained it 'by saying that it arose
from 5 revolutions of the planet Jupiter . . ,'"
Passing beyond our quaint old source book, we may investigate this
rumored Indian cycle of Vrihaspati. We soon discover that it does indeed
exist in Indian tradition, where it is more properly known as that of
Brihaspati. The name Brihaspati (or Vrihaspati) is the name of the planet
Jupiter in Sanskrit, and the cycle which takes its name from this planet is a
6o-year cycle.
And further:
'. . . (in) Greece, where we have - besides the wrestling of Kronos and
Saturn at Olympia — also the Daidalia, held in the interval of sixty years —
sixty-year cycles in India, or in the West Sudan, are not likely to be
understood, if the scholars prefer to inhibit the trigon of the Saturn-Jupiter
conjunction . . .'
And this trigon must be diagrammatically presented.
We thus see that Santillana and von Dechend specifically identify sixty-
year cycles of the West Sudan, where the Dogon live, with the Jupiter-
Saturn synchronism over sixty years. This was not known to me when I
assumed the same thing: the reader will appreciate that such a
concurrence of opinion urged me to think this idea correct.
The Dogon associate a 60-year period with the creation of the world by
Amma.12 In the light of this, it is interesting that in the Western
astrological tradition, Saturn 'gives the measures of creation' to Jupiter
specifically through the interconnection of their orbits in the way which we
have been describing. Santillana and von Dechend explain this quite
well13 and Johannes Kepler's works De Stella Nova and De Vero Anno are
relevant to the subject.14
See also Figures 41 and 42 for the diagrams by which Saturn gives the
(temporal) measures of creation to Jupiter. There is a Great Conjunction of
Jupiter and Saturn every twenty years, as the diagrams show. The Dogon
seem to be aware of the 20-year subdivision of the 60-year period too. If
the reader turns back to the Griaule and Dieterlen article which follows
Chapter One of this book, and studies Figure ii accompanying that article,
as well as the text referring to it, he will see that the Sigui 60-year
computation is broken down into 20-year segments.
Figure xii of the Griaule and Dieterlen article in this book records the
'mutilating domination of Sirius over the femininity of Yasigui'.
The mutilation of Saturn by Jupiter, and the various creations which sprang
from the resulting blood and seed, are of the same current of tradition as
all the elements of a similar kind to be found among the Dogon, and which
are related to these comparative orbitings of Saturn and Jupiter, as well as
other heavenly bodies.
The placenta comes back into the picture too. We have seen in the main
text of the book that the placenta is the symbol; for the Dogon, of a
planetary system, and the system of our sun and its planets is a placenta.
It is therefore interesting that the Dogon say that 60 is the count of the
cosmic placenta.15
The Dogon even break 60 down themselves into '5 series of 12'16 and
twice thirty, which seems a fairly specific indication that our hypothesis
has a sound basis. For the last point, the drawing above the door of the
Dogon sanctuary of Binou17 reinforces these ideas. This drawing is used
for the computation of the Sigui. Accompanying this drawing is a drawing
of the Nommo which is broken down into two major portions: his right 'leg'
marks the first thirty years and his left 'leg the second thirty years.
The legs are joined to represent that only taken together do these two
thirty-year periods have significance. And, as we know, Nommo did not
actually have legs. He had a fish-tail extremity.
The fact that each 'leg' represents a period of years is made quite clear by
the information given that,
'the left leg is made a little longer every year in such a way that it is the
same length as the other (leg) by the time of the Sigui.'
This process recalls Plutarch's remark, noted much earlier in the book,
that Zeus (Jupiter) had his legs joined together. In short, Jupiter's legs
were joined together because each of his 'legs' represented one of the
thirty-year orbital periods of his father Saturn, and it was on his father that
he stood. For Saturn upheld Jupiter's creation by providing him with the
temporal measures, as Santillana and von Dechend explain.18
And the Dogon are the people who preserve this intricate tradition most
fully, which should not surprise us. They say that 60 is the 'number of the
placenta', and indeed it is. Without 60 we could not define our solar
system according to the traditional view of it - and this traditional view is
the one resting on the capabilities of observation, which is sensible.
For us to define our system today by saying it is bounded by the motions
of a tiny body called Pluto doesn't mean anything to anybody. For us to
ground ourselves in the weighty and ponderous motions of those two
observable planets Saturn and Jupiter, and define our solar system -
perhaps 'poetically' - by their motions as extremities, we would be striking
a deep chord in that music of the spheres of which we have all heard
fanciful tales, but of which today we know nothing.
But music which cannot be heard is not necessarily lost to the inner ear.
Music, after all, is not necessarily audible sound. Harmony transcends the
sensibly perceptive. The observance of a celestial harmony in the ancient
cultures helped keep a sane perspective. To acknowledge the deep
resounding bass of the 60-year cycle was the ultimate poetic myth of the
solar system, expressed in that vast mythological fabric woven around all
the heavenly bodies, a whole cloth binding together both man and planets
in a cosmic unity which gave man dignity and meaning in a world whose
periods and cycles he had defined and celebrated in his religious festivals.
Even today we do this, but have lost consciousness of it; Easter is defined
by the moon. But who notices that? The cosmic bodies make their silent
music but we have stopped our ears. We do not wish to be integrally
related to our cosmic environment by observances of the great motions
above us.
All the reader need do is to take the cotton wool out of his ears and listen.
He will hear silence. And the cycles and periods of that silence are the
beautiful music of the cosmos.
But as long as we keep our ears stopped, we will be deafened by our inner
noise and will have those tortured 'modern' looks on our faces.
Back to Contents
APPENDIX IV
The Meaning of the E at Delphi
He was, however, most interested of all in Delphi itself, for he was one of
the two priests of Apollo there.
The central subject of the discussion is the letter E which was a prominent
inscription at the Delphic shrine. (That is, the letter E was carved in stone
quite on its own at Delphi and was a subject of much curious speculation
to the classical Greeks, who retained no tradition of the meaning of the
ancient inscription of this single letter.)
Plutarch, in this essay on the E at Delphi, tells us that beside the well-
known inscriptions at Delphi there was also a representation of the letter
E, the fifth letter of the Greek alphabet. The Greek name for this letter was
El, and this diphthong, in addition to being used in Plutarch's time as the
name of E (which denotes the number five), is the Greek word for 'if, and
also the word for the second person singular of the verb 'to be' (thou art).
The facts that Delphi is the second descending centre in the geodetic
octave, and that it is symbolized by the second vowel E, would seem to go
well together. The seven vowels (each corresponding to one of the oracle
centres) were uttered in succession as the holy 'unspeakable' name of
God by Egyptian priests.
In Chapter XVI of The White Goddess, Robert Graves discusses this too,
and there quotes Demetrius. Graves also refers to an eight-letter version
of the sacred name. It may be that if one wants to count the base oracle
centre (which in musical analogy is the octave expression of the top
centre) one should have an eight-letter version.
This version of the name is:
JEHUOVAO.
We are faced with archaeological evidence that the second vowel, E, was
prominently associated with the second oracle centre in descending order.
(See Plate 12 of this book.) And we know from Herodotus that Dodona, the
top oracle centre, was said to be founded by Egyptian priestesses from
Thebes in Egypt. We also know that certain Egyptian priests sang the
seven vowels (or eight vowels, including an aspirate) in succession.
We have already seen that the geodetic oracle centers seem to have an
octave structure. And as this book went to press a discovery became
known which demonstrated the existence of the heptatonic, diatonic
musical scale in the ancient Near East. We may even make a presumption
that the uttering of the seven vowels in succession may possibly have
corresponded to the seven notes of the octave (but we may never know
that for certain).
So granted all the above, what follows? If each oracle centre had a vowel
associated with it, then the second vowel being associated with the
second centre would seem to imply a corresponding arrangement for the
other centers. And if that is the case, it would seem that the entire system
would be associated with and actually comprise a geodetic spelling-out,
over eight degrees of latitude, of the unspeakable holy name of God,
known commonly to the Hebrews as 'Jehovah'.
In closing, it would seem that the E at Delphi must fall into some coherent
system of the kind I suggest, and the explanation of the enigma must be
connected with Plutarch's lightly advocated second explanation - that to
do with E being the second vowel.
Back to Contents
Notes
We read in Genesis 23:7 that 'Abraham stood up and then bowed low to
the Hittites, the people of that country'. The only trouble about this is that,
according to our extremely sound archaeological knowledge, there should
not have been any Hittites in 'that country' - namely, at Hebron in
Palestine. The Hittite conquests never extended that far south.
In his book The Hittites, Professor Oliver Gurney has an entire section (pp.
59-62) entitled 'The Hittites in Palestine'.
In it he says:
We have now to deal with the paradoxical fact that, whereas the Hittites
appear in the Old Testament as a Palestinian tribe, increasing knowledge
of the history of the ancient people of Hatti has led us ever farther from
Palestine, until their homeland has been discovered in the heart of the
Anatolian plateau.
Moreover, the preceding outline of Hittite history will have shown us that
before the reign of Suppiluliumas there was no Hittite state south of the
Taurus; that the Syrian vassal states of the Hittite Empire were confined to
the area north of Kadesh on the Orontes; and that although Hittite armies
reached Damascus, they never entered Palestine itself. Of the neo-Hittite
states there was none south of Hamath, and the latter did not include any
part of Palestine within its territories, being separated from it by the
Aramean kingdom of Damascus.
We thus find clear evidence in books of the Bible for the Hittites residing in
Palestine. And their settlements were specifically in the hills at Hebron.
Gurney says:
'Who, then, were these Hittites of the Palestine hills ? A very ingenious
answer has been put foward by E. Forrer.'
The gist of this is that, considerably before 1335 B.C., some Hittites from
the city of Kurustamma in the north-east of Anatolia had gone to Egypt, of
which documentary evidence exists:
However surprising it may seem, the text here quoted states explicitly
that during the reign of Suppiluliumas some men from this obscure
northern city entered the 'land of Egypt', a term which would include all
territory under Egyptian rule. The text leaves the circumstances under
which this occurred obscure, but the reference to the Weather-god of Hatti
as the instigator of the move is in favour of a deliberate act of state rather
than a flight of fugitives from the Hittite conquest, as suggested by Forrer.
However that may be, we have here one certain instance of a group of
Hittites (i.e., subjects of the King of Hatti) entering Egyptian territory, and
the possibility of their having settled in the sparsely populated Palestinian
hills is not to be ignored . . . (But) emigration of Anatolian Hittites to
Palestine cannot have been a frequent occurrence. . . . (and) there is some
hope that further excavation [of texts] among the archives of Boghazkoy
will bring enlightenment.
It should be pointed out that the reign of Suppiluliumas during which the
above emigration took place covered the years 1380-1346 B.C. It was to
him that the widow of Tutankhamen, the Egyptian Queen Ankhesenamun,
third daughter of Pharaoh Akhenaten, sent a plaintive letter asking for one
of his sons to become her husband.
He sent a son, but the son was ambushed on the way to Egypt and killed,
probably by Hor-em-heb, who seized the throne of Egypt and forced
Ankhesenamun to marry him in order to legitimize his usurpation. This is a
sad story but does not really concern us here. I mention it merely to bring
to life the chronology of the emigration to Hebron, and also because it
demonstrates the close links possible at that time between the Hittites
and Egypt. Those who wish to read the letter in full and follow up this
interesting tale of personal tragedy are referred to Ancient Mar Eastern
Texts (ed. Pritchard, see Bibliography), pp. 319, 395.
However, the Hittite emigration in the reign of Suppiluliumas cannot have
been the original Hittite settlement at Hebron. For if Abraham met Hittites
when he arrived at Hebron, then there must have been Hittites there for
several hundred years before the reign of Suppiluliumas which extended
1380-1346 B.C.
Despite the fact that there can be a case made for Abraham's Ur being a
different Ur, the main point is the date, for Abraham went to Hebron and
met Hittites already there five hundred years before the emigration which
Gurney mentions. Roux repeats his dating, and gives references, on page
215 of his book.
The prince of the Hebron region, Shuwardata, first fought the rapacious
Apiru raiders who swarmed over the countryside and then joined them,
rebelling against the Pharaoh before whom, in his correspondence, he had
shortly before been 'bowing seven times and again seven times, both
prone and supine'. But Egypt was weak, and Palestine degenerated into
chaos. It is no wonder that during this period there was a Hittite migration
to what was titular Egyptian territory. No Hittite settlement at Hebron
could have felt itself entirely secure.
But what was the reason for the Hittite settlement at Hebron in the first
place ?
'The North Syrian Hittite states . . . may have felt a certain racial or
cultural affinity with Urartu Since we have documentary evidence that it
was a divine command which made the Hittites of the fourteenth century
B.C. go to what we assume was possibly Hebron, we can see that they
were obeying an oracular injunction. This is natural if their activity was
connected with the oracle centers. Indeed, they could not have gone
without a divine command on such exclusively divine and non-imperial
business. Gurney may be quite right in saying that the journey was a
deliberate act and not a flight of fugitives. It was as deliberate as the
'doves who flew to Dodona'.
We have distinct evidence that Hebron really did have an oracle centre,
apart from its being on the same latitude as Behdet. To investigate this,
we turn to The White Goddess by Robert Graves, where in Chapter IX he
discusses Hebron a great deal.
But Caleb . . . conveyed the Holy Spirit to Hebron when, in the time of
Joshua, he ousted the Anakim from the shrine of Machpelah. Machpelah,
an oracular cave cut from the rock, was the sepulchre of Abraham, and
Caleb went there to consult his shade ... it is likely that neither Isaac nor
Jacob nor their 'wives' were at first associated with the cave. The story of
its purchase from Ephron . . . and the . . . Hittites, is told in Genesis 23.
Though late and much edited, this chapter seems to record a friendly
arrangement between the devotees of the goddess Sarah, the Goddess of
the tribe of Isaac, and their allies the devotees of the Goddess Heth
(Hathor? Tethys?) who owned the shrine:
Sarah was forced out of Be'er-Lahai-Roi by another tribe and came to seek
an asylum at nearby Hebron (p. 162).
Graves states (p. 164) that 'Abraham' was in fact a tribe, and that this
tribe also came down from Armenia (vicinity of Ararat). He says:'
"Abraham" being in this sense the far-travelled tribe that came down into
Palestine from Armenia at the close of the third millennium B.C.' In fact,
we must give some thought to 'the chosen people' - later known as
Hebrews - being 'chosen' in the sense that they were particularly
connected with tending an oracle centre or centres. Did Abraham go to
Hebron for the same reasons that the Hittites did?
Graves continues:
For Adam, 'the red man', seems to have been the original oracular hero of
Machpelah; it is likely that Caleb consulted his shade not Abraham's,
unless Adam and Abraham are titles of the same hero. Elias Levita, the
fifteenth-century Hebrew commentator, records the tradition that the
teraphim which Rachel stole from her father Laban were mummified
oracular heads and that the head of Adam was among them. If he was
right, the Genesis narrative refers to a seizure of the oracular shrine of
Hebron by Saul's Benjaminites from the Calebites.
Caleb was an Edomite clan; which suggests the identification of Edom with
Adam: they are the same word, meaning 'red'. But if Adam was really
Edom, one would expect to find a tradition that the head of Esau, the
ancestor of the Edomites, was also buried at Hebron; and this is, in fact,
supplied by the Talmud . . . that Esau's body was carried off for burial on
Mount Seir by his sons; and that his head was buried at Hebron by Joseph.
Graves says that according to the tradition (p. 161): 'Hebron may be called
the centre of the earth, from its position near the junction of two seas and
the three ancient continents.' How similar this 'centre of the earth' epithet
is to Delphi's, as 'the navel of the world'. All the main oracle centres were
navel or omphalos centres of the earth.
As for the Hittites, they were at Hebron - and only at that specific place in
Palestine - because of its oracle centre.
APPENDIX VI
The Dogon Stages of Initiation
The giri so, 'word at face value', is the first knowledge implying simple
explanations where the mythical characters are often disguised, their
adventures simplified and invented, and are not linked together. It has to
do with invisible deeds, concerning the ordinary rituals and materials.
The benne so, 'word on the side', includes 'the words in the giri so' and a
thorough study of certain parts of the rites and representations. Their
coordination only appears within the great divisions of learning which are
not completely revealed.
The bolo so, 'word from behind', completes the preceding learning, on the
one hand, and on the other hand furnishes the syntheses that apply to a
vaster whole. However, this stage does not yet include instruction in the
truly secret parts of the tradition.
The so dayi, 'clear word', concerns the edifice of knowledge in its ordered
complexity.